Feedback Letter | |
From: | Patrick |
Comment: | Did Darwin ever
say that the universe created itself? Or even discuss the origin
of the universe? I ask because Answers in Genesis seems to think
he did.
"We now know that if Darwin could have foreseen coming scientific developments, he would have had good reason to be concerned that his theory might one day be proved wrong...James Joule, R.J.E. Clausius, and Lord Kelvin were only just developing the concepts of thermodynamics, the first law of which states that energy can neither be created nor destroyed (so the present universe could not have created itself)". I'm sure Darwin stuck to biology alone but I don't have the time to find out for sure. Thought you would probably know. I think if these websites had the killer evidence to fell evolution they claim they do they'd be shouting it from the rooftops, yet on their sites you have to dig. Even then they seem to spend time attacking Darwins beliefs or Hitlers god-rejection, surely none of this affects the truth! Thanks |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | At no point as far
as I know, in his books, articles or correspondence, did Darwin
address the origins of the universe, or even the earth. So far as
he was concerned that was a question for the astronomers, the
physicists (although he tangled with Kelvin, and turned out to be
right, about the age of the earth) and the other scientific
disciplines that could address the matter. The idea that the
solar system was formed from a cloud of gas was proposed in the
18thC (by Kant, among others), and the age and size of the
universe was the topic of physics and cosmology until fairly
recently. Darwin had nothing whatsoever to do with it.
Darwin's theories addressed only the origins of species, of adaptations, and the distribution of organisms around the world. He never made any cosmic claims, although in a private letter he speculated that life might have begun in a "warm pond" of prebiological chemicals. Answers in Genesis, like all creationists, grasp at straws to make their views sound halfway rational. In this case, the straws make a strawman. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Hello. I find this site to be a great resource for my arguments against creationists. A creationist friend of mine and I were in a discussion recently and the focus of his argument was the existence irreducibly complex strucures. He claimed that certain organisms could not exist if they were missing even one biological component, disproving the notion of descent with modification that I was advocating. In his example, he used the flagellum of a cell, saying that before the flagellum evolved, that the cell could not move and, therefore, could not find food. What are your thoughts on this matter? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Has he looked at all the single celled organisms that live today that do not have flagella? So far as we can tell, none complain of hunger. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | David |
Comment: | So many people
writing to your site have a deep misunderstanding of the
relationship between life and thermodynamics. A living cell is
just an engine for exporting disorder. A cell is not a closed
system. It is constantly importing energy and exporting disorder.
As a collection of cells, every metazoan, including us, is an
exporter of disorder until they die. At that point,
thermodynamics asserts iself. Without the ability to export
disorder, we decay.
That is my viewpoint as a "Darwinist", "Atomist", "Plate Tectonicist", "Big Bangist", "Relativist", "Quantumist", and every other "-ist" that IDiots can condemn. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Dacotah Melicher |
Comment: | I'm a huge fan of
this site. I use it almost daily, and I pimp it whenever
opportunity arrises. If I wasn't a pennyless college student you
guys would be getting some serious tithe.
I was spending some time browsing the creationist wiki response. I'm not sure why, but I can only assume masochistic reasons. It is the same ignorant, unsupported, misquoted, out-of-context, dark ages nonsense that I've come to expect from any creationist trying to defend an indefensible belief. Quite often they answer questions with questions, fail to site sources, fail to quote the talkorigins.org remark they are trying to refute, or use bad science. My favorite though, and you'll love this, is when they accuse talkorigins.org of citing a source that has been outdated by a few years, when most sources they site...are...from...the...BIBLE... An example that really drove me over the edge is when they claim that since C14 dating methods may be off because of "an highly increased ratio of C14 saturation in the atmosphere after the flood". Care to hazard a guess as to why that might happen? Or just end the thing with a question mark, as per usual? Maybe site some journals? Keep up the excellent work. Dacotah. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Maybe you're way ahead of me. It seems like the manpower emphasis should be less on sending venerable evolutionary scientists before the lions of the ilk of Gish, et al., and more on Science BS' and MS's who are double majors in things like Communication, Debate, with some Drama experience and even Voice training to get those pipes into shape. The debaters should be very healthy and appealing in appearance. They should present qualities of humility, graciousness, wit, and a devotion to knowledge amd Biology's very noble tradition. I'm sure they're out there; they could probably even make a very good living doing it as they get more experienced and help make our society better in the process. I applaud the hard work that goes into this site. I feel love and encouragement from the commitment to our cerebral heritage evidenced here. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | There's a
difference between selling a product (including religion) and
getting information over. In "debates" in front of audiences
those with the least information, and the greatest malignity, can
win every time, not because they put a rational debate but
because in the time it takes to make one point they can, and do,
raise ten "objections". It's easier to be a knocker than a
builder.
That said, there are an increasing number of scientists who are beginning to realise the need to educate the broader community, and some of them do it very well. For a start, check out Science Blogs. Moreover, science communicators are a good idea, but they will either end up as TV presenters like the estimable David Attenborough (who would not be able to start his career today, I think) or lack the credibility of an actual scientist. Scientists can be very persuasive when they know their field. I'd like to see a creationist debate a scientist on one field only, the scientists, and see how they do... |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | 'Irchie' |
Comment: | Hello, As a Briton, I have recently been reading with amusement, then incredulity,(though I won't make an argument through it), the contents of a British website by the Creation Science Movement here in the UK. It is run by a couple of engineers, a chemist, and-wait for it- a weatherman! They have actually set up a 'museum',(whoopee!- 'Daddy please can we go to the Natural History Museum and see the Giant Squid and Dinosaurs?''No, son I want you to have a balanced view of the world, let's go and learn about the flood'). I look forward to going there, if only for a laugh. And to argue with any staff lurking around. Sadly there seem to be real fossils there, so I may try to liberate them, to donate them to a real museum. The site used to have a guest book, to which I sent a few questions relating to the age of the cosmos, freshwater life surviving a global flood, and so on. I recieved the usual lame answers. Unfortunately now they have closed the guestbook, because it was 'turning into a forum' Very revealing! I should feel sad at having contributed to the demise of a debate, but the more I read about creation science, the more I wish these intellectual terrorists would shut up, and start doing good Christian works instead. Thought I'd send you a bulletin from the old country. Great site, and thankyou! |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | When I read your web page “Problems with a Global Flood” http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-noahs-ark.html) you did not mention anything about recent DNA discoveries of modern human’s origins in Africa. “Genetic diversity amongst modern human populations is greatest in the African continent.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-origin_hypothesis). Do you know if there are several independent studies that collaborate this discovery? If so, can you think of any scenario that fits this DNA data and also supports the Christian fundamentalist’s claims that modern human’s origins are on the mountains of Ararat in the Mesopotamia region? Also, in “Problems with a Global Flood” page, you make a good case against a global flood, but some people will then simply try to justify their Biblical “Word of God” belief by claiming a local flood. (see: http://www.godandscience.org/apologetics/localflood.html) Could a local flood have lasted for more than a couple of days after the rains stopped? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Creationists have
no explanation for any genetic diversity. That there is more
diversity in Africa merely requires slightly different handwaving
from the creationist.
Floods can cause long-lasting bodies of water if they flood into a basin without an outlet. The Salton Sea in California is just such an example. Another possibility, proposed by Robert Best, is that a river flood washed Noah into the Persian Gulf, where he drifted for a year before finally drifting to land. His landing on a mountain according to the Bible is explained as a mistranslation of a word which means either "mountain" or "region." |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | After reading many
of the post in the feedback area, and wanted to get a better
grasp of the cause and effect of the theory of evolution, and
needing something to use as a comparison, I chose my digital
watch. I removed the back cover and popped the battery out, and
guess what? The watch stopped working, it was completely dead. So
sitting back to ponder the situation, I realized I had stumbled
on irreducible complexity. Without the one part, the whole was
useless and couldn't function. But wait, I felt there had to be
more to it than that.
It was then I decided to look back at the evidence for all watches. I took an old pockwatch I had had for many years and pried the back off it and was absolutely stunned to find it was filled with springs and gears. I compared that to my digital watch and found no comparison between the two. I wondered how could this one thing filled with springs and gears and this thing called electronics both be called a watch? What sort of classication process placed them in the same genre? I was stymied. Did not content dictate function? How could a watch filled with springs and gears make that jump to a watch filled with electronics? What mechanism in our natural world could cause such a drastic change from one to the other? What about water clocks that had neither of these mechanisms? Could all three then be truly labled as watches? How could any reasoning person make that assumption, since you can't turn water into springs and gears, nor springs and gears into electonics with a piece of vibrating quartz? What observations have been made to determine that the leap from one to the other was made, or was even possible? None, I assume, so it is with unreasonable arrogance that such a conclusion can be made by those that call themselves watch makers. How dare they call themselves makers anyway. Don't they know the great timekeeper will be sorely peeved at their so called expert pronouncements and will more than likely exile them to a place of eternal noon? Thus I have reached the only conclusion a logically thinking person can make. There is no such thing as time. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood and the Young Earth |
Response: | My congratulations. Yours is a first rate exposure of the weakenss of Dembski's concept of specification. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Hello talkorigins, I was just reading your January feedback and I noticed a posting by one named Elijah who noted that creationists do not generally attack other branches or theories of science. As the responder pointed out, this is clearly untrue. However, I think it is also worth pointing out that creationists/fundamentalists, when their arguments are properly understood, misunderstand political thought, history and philosophy as badly as they scientists say they misunderstand every facet of science. This, for the curious, is why scientists are loathe to give quarter to creationist ideas of any kind in highschool biology classes. Creationists want to rewrite the history of civilization as badly as they want to debase venerated theories in science such as evolution. I tend to think this fear is a little overstated on behalf of scientists myself; however, this is a real concern and it is better to err on the side of caution and keep them out altogether. Plus, it is fun to watch them keep trying to get creationism in public schools....GO DOVER SCHOOL BOARD!!!!! |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Listen get of your
high horse and try to look at all sides of the arguemant. the
only reason you pick evolution(which by the way is impossible and
never has been observed or proved)is becaause you don't want to
submit to an all powerful being you want to be "GOD"
write me back and tell me this isn't ture. |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: | It isn't true. |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | To elaborate on Wesley's comment somewhat: many of the contributors to this archive, and a considerable number of evolutionary biologists, are Christians. Others will be believing Jews, Hindus, Muslims and Mormons. Unless you circularly define a "God believer" as someone who doesn't believe in evolution, you must accept that religious belief and evolution are independent. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Dear Sirs, Thank
you for providing such a sublime summation of the various
pseudo-facts presented in MOM. You have prevented at least one
allegedly intelligent individual from musing too deeply about
farsical histories and cataclysims.
GLC |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Thank you for giving me such clear information for my first science project. I am in second grade. Evolution makes so much sense! |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | THE EVOLUTION THEORY IS THE STUPIDEST THING I HAVE EVR HEARD OF!!!!! WHY DO PEOPLE HAVE TO BE IDIOTS AND MAKE THIS CRAP UP?!?! ALL CREATION QUESTIONS CAN BE ANSWERED BY READING THE BIBLE!!!!!!! |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I apologize for
the rambling nature of this feedback, and the fact that it
doesn't fit anywhere, but there are some things I wanted to say,
and here is a good place.
First of all, I am a devout Christian, and a believer in God-given wisdom, which allows us to investigate the earth and the processes by which He created it. And it is quite obvious that the earth is billions of years old, and that natural selection and a common ancestor are part of it. To deny this is to misuse our brains. I also want to comment on the use of the word "supernatural". I don't quite agree with this word, as I believe that all that exists (including God Himself) are part of "nature". What we view as supernatural is merely that which cannot be observed by humans, because we lack the means. Just as the flight of an airplane doesn't defy the laws of gravity, but override them with "higher" laws, so miracles don't defy the laws of nature but appeal to higher laws and forces which humans can't observe or manipulate. (Of course, the fact that we can't means that I rely on faith to believe in them, so they are outside the realm of science.) On the use of the word "myth" - it is generally believed to mean "a false religious story". But it really means (to me at least) "a non-historically verified story that reveals deeper principles or truths". Thus I refer to the Resurrection of Christ as a "myth" because it is not historically verified (despite what some think) and because it reveals the truth that Christ atoned for us. I also accept its historical truth, but that is a matter of faith. And a personal anecdote - I wavered between accepting evolution and thinking that it contradicted my beliefs, throughout my youth. It was a happy moment for me to realize that I can accept both without compromise, and hold onto both faith and reason. And a little hope for the future: my mother, a "creationist" Catholic (who could accept evolution without compromising her beliefs, but doesn't for some reason) homeschools my younger sisters, and teaches them creationism. But one day my sister asked my dad, an "evolutionist" Mormon (the LDS Church makes no claim either way on the issue; those with an understanding of science in the church generally accept evolution, while those who don't tend to think that evolution means rejection of faith) a question about the behavior of dogs. I forget the details, but the answer my father gave had to do with how dogs evolved from wolves as they were domesticated. My sister is a smart young girl, and I think that she will figure it out some day. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I was feeling kind of down and surfed the web. I came across this site and it just cracked me up. This is great for a laugh because the Flat Earth Society is so full of crap that there eyes must be brown. Thanks for the laugh |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: |
1. Hereby a note praising the hard work done by the authors of the various articles in the archive. 2. 1 is the primary issue; feel it incumbent to contribute, but belong to humanities, not nat. sciences. Token musings under 4. 3. Since they are more anti-religious than pro-evolution, they may not be fitting for inclusion on site. Perhaps they would serve in controversy. 4. a) re ca001, ethics in general (debate point): Many ethical theories require that the proponent adhere to his or her own ethical precepts. One such precept is "love your enemies". Certain well-known deities are known to condemn opponents to eternal torment in hell, a place specially designed for this purpose; one notable opponent was even condemned to be the Devil. Since this at best is _very_ tough love, one could question the lovingness of the deity in question; the coherence of the ethical position in question; and the legitimacy of criticism by adherents to that position. b) re ethics ca009, behaving like animals (debate point): "Behaving like animals" is only bad if animal behaviour is bad. According to creationist sources, animals were created by a deity; the same deity remarked, upon examining his handiwork: "And he saw that it was good". This implies that animal behaviour is just fine, and hence this observation cannot really form the basis of any accusation. Gambatte. T |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | this web site stinks i tried to use it for my homework and it was a useless piece of @#$% i needed pictures if natural selection and not just word after word after paragraph after page of useless writting i give this web a horrible grade |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The responder is
listed as having come from The Origin of Species.
Ironically, this is where natural selection was first proposed as
a mechanism of evolution, and the text that convinced people of
it.
It is not easily done to give pictures of natural selection, as it is a process that happens over many generations and many organisms. Even if we showed photos of the variants that are selected out or in, it still wouldn't give much idea of how it occurs. Still if you need to find some nonverbal information about natural selection, try here: Mark Ridley's textbook, chapter on natural selection (PDF) which is still pretty technical, or the |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | This site is no use to me... give me some info that is usefull. PLEASE!!@!!!!!!! |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood and the Young Earth |
Response: | Buy low, sell
high.
Don't eat yellow snow. A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush. If V.P. Cheney has a gun, duck! Don't spit into the wind. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | First, I want to
congratulate you on an excellent website and an important
service. Thanks for your hard work!
Now comes the rant: I'm constantly disappointed by people who claim to be for science but who actually seem to be against religion. I think this is counterproductive. It is possible that someday everyone will accept the theory of evolution (just as almost everyone now accepts the heliocentric theory of the solar system), but the way to get to this day is not through attempts to attack Christianity or religion in general. In martial arts we are taught to avoid putting ourselves in direct conflict with our opponent's forces, but rather to move perpendicularly. If the goal of the scientific community is really to advance science, the best way to move is orthogonally to the force of religious faith. As a believer in God and (in an entirely different sense) a believer in evolution, I don't see religion and science as incompatible. Generally the objection to evolution is merely a knee-jerk reaction against anything new. If the creationist can be involved in a reasonable discussion, he or she can realize that evolution in no way prevents Jesus from being our saviour, or God from having created the world. This is the orthogonal direction, and the direction we really care about (or say that we care about) anyway. Too often, I hear people who mean to convince a creationist that evolution is legitimate instead attacking that person's religious faith. Needless to say, this never works. It evokes a massive defensive reaction and only convinces the creationist that evolution is the tool of the devil, etc. The best way to deal with the bible thumpers (who usually don't understand the passages they're quoting anyway) is to quietly agree that that's what it says in the Bible, but that it has nothing to do with evolution or science. Try to keep the two ideas separate. That said, I think you all do a good job at this. Please continue trying not to offend the fundamentalists. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Well, I personally
don't want to offend anyone, but when those people try to teach
my kids untruths, or try to gain political influence where it is
inappropriate for them to have it in a democracy, then it is
appropriate to be offensive (as in, go on the offensive).
I agree that argument will not (usually, there are exceptions) move a creationist, because their personal commitments are to the religious tradition and community, not to science or knowledge of the physical world. But argument will move an honest theist, and prevent someone on the verge of adopting an antiscience approach to life from doing so uninformed. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Last year, the
media and scientific community reported the results from the
completion of the chimp genome. The verdict: 96% similarity to
human beings.
However, when one does a little research on gene sizes, one finds that depending upon the report, the size of the chimp genome is between 4% and 10% BIGGER than that of human beings (Souce:www.genomesize.com et al). The average size discrepancy of all studies is 7%. My question: How can the chimp genome and the human genome be 96% similar if the chimp genome is 7% BIGGER than that of humans? Regards |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | A lot of a genome
is long terminal repeats of unused copies of genes or of nonsense
sequences, and also DNA that is not directly expressed. Different
organisms have different amounts of this DNA. it doesn't directly
correlate with the amount of phenotypic change between species.
Also, a recent paper in Nature that suggests that what is most distinct between humans and chimps is that there is a vast difference in these regulatory genes' action, not in the number of expressed genes. This can be compared to a small action (turning a knob) which has a large effect (changing the volume of the stereo). |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I am a high school
science teacher. Recently I had a student approach me about radio
carbon dating. The student told me of a story involving a dead
body that was found using carbon dating to be approximately 1000
years old. However the body was also found to be wearing modern
name brand athletic shoes. This story of course was meant to
discredit radiometric dating methods.
My question is whether you have ever heard this argument before, and if so have any idea how it got started. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood Redux |
Response: | This is of course
nonsense. When you hear stupid stories like this, you should
already know how to respond if you are being paid to teach
secondary school science.
Since you indicate that you don't understand basic science, or the general methods of creationist apolgetics I'll break it down: Creationists lie. They always lie, they lie worse than politicians, they lie worse than used car salesmen, they lie when their argument is weakened by a lie. The entire story you presented was a lie. There was no instance in which a body wearing modern shoes was ever sampled for C14 dating. Are we supposed to be so stupid that we are to believe that after a radiocarbon sample is submitted, the carcass was just suddenly revealed to be wearing shoes? A body is not just "found" to be wearing shoes. Is anyone this stupid? I question that this story has any factual basis at all. Is this a teacher? Was there a student? Creationists do promote lies about radiocarbon dating that are better constructed that the one you told. For a number of better tempered responces I recommend Radiometric Dating, A Christian Perspective by Dr. Roger C. Wiens. Also, everyone interested in creationist lies about radiocarbon dating is directed to How Good Are Those Young-Earth Arguments? by Dave Matson The age of the Earth (which is NOT determined by radiocarbon dating) is fully discussed by Radiometric Dating Does Work or better yet, Dalrymple, G. Brent 1991 The Age of the Earth Stanford University Press |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Are there any serious people here that want to see the world as it is or as it was? Because reading through your poor theory, I got that feeling and certitude that you guys not only don't have any proof for evolution but you willingly persist in not seing the reality. There is development but no evolution. Since when do cars evolve as we are continuously told? Since when poor workers are ridiculed this way? because according to your pathetic theory have nothing to do with the new models of cars that are produced in their own prodution lines. Im talking about the new Subaru Evolution WrX. I worked on a production line for years, and believe me that i worked my butt off to put parts together and even though someone else designed and manufactured them, it still took effort and thinking to assemble a car together. And you guys keep on PRAISING and promoting this God EVOLUTION, then why the heck do we still work if there is this law of evolution that makes things work tgether without any human help?!? I hope you don't have the courage to say that my process of working is evolution coz then i'll have no more respect for you monkies... |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Ancient Molecules and Modern Myths |
Response: | There is a reason
that we are losing jobs overseas. Your letter illustrates the
reason. Cars don't reproduce on their own. Cars can't evolve,
pal.
How about starting with the basics? Start at the top and work your way down the list. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Is it true that in the womb most mammals, including human beings, have ten nipples which reduce depending on the need of the species (pigs maintain 8 in accordance with how many children they have, humans are left with only two (usually), etc)? Is this addressed anywhere on the site? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | I can't find any
resources that mention this "fact", but I did find this
site, which discusses how a "mammary band" develops into
mammary glands. Also see KTDyke's site
for more information and links.
It is true that mice have ten nipples, but so far as I can tell the number of nipples aren't reduced later in development. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | You say in Claim
CC361.2: Frozen mammoths are not common. As of 1961, only
thirty-nine have been found with some flesh preserved, and only
four of those were more or less intact (Farrand 1961).
But National Geographic says: There are believed to be ten million mammoths buried in permanently frozen soil in Siberia. Because of the sparse human population in the region, though, only about a hundred specimens have been discovered . . . . ttp://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/04/0408_050408_woollymammoth_2.html |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I find your site to be quite interesting and useful. I am a creationist and I, to this point, am an old-worlder. I am not sure whether or not I am a full fledged theistic evolutionist or not. What I do know (if that is possible) is that the dichotomy on the title of your website is faulty. The information you give is a positive outline and defense of evolution. Evolution does not touch on the issue of creation, at least not on the foundational level (it could be claimed that nature is self-existant and point to evolution as support for the conclusion, but you can't come to the conclusion of self-existence from evolution alone). I believe you touch on this in a few of your articles, about how there are "theistic evolutionists". Wouldn't "Exploring the created as they are/evolution debate" be a more accurate description of your site? Probably isn't as effective a marketing tool (haha). Thanks for your effort. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Well to assert
that we explore the created is to beg the question a little, as
many people who are evolution-supporters are not religious, or if
they are religious, not inclined to believe in a creator. But
that is besides the point here.
The "self-existence" of the real world is not an issue in evolutionary biology, because evolution is about biology, not the reality of the world or its reliance or not on a creator God. Evolution is not, contrary to what is often stated by its opponents, about the nature of the universe, but about the origins and nature of the diversity of living things we see in the world around us. And there is no controversy about this in biology. Biologists understand and accept that life evolved "from a few forms or one" as Darwin said, and if there is disagreement in the science, it is whether or not various mechanisms played a major or minor role in that evolution, and whether it happens relatively quickly or gradually. Theistic evolutionists are no less believers in creation than "creationists". There is a distinction between the creation of the universe, which is traditional creationism, and the creation of individual species or "kinds" of living things, which is called "special creationism" ("special" is the adjective of "species" as well as being a particular instance). Most theists are evolutionists when it comes to biology. The exceptions are the special creationists. If the world was created or not, life evolves. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Eric Cartwright |
Comment: | I have heard from several people that the female race is a more evolved from of Homo sapien. How would you attack such a statement from an evolutionary stand point? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Ancient Molecules and Modern Myths |
Response: | Speaking as a
married man, I don't attack that at all! If I heard such nonsense
uttered by my dear wife I would nod in agreement and schedule a
medical appointment for her.
Seriously, males and females are the same species and the same races and I am sure that you are just being a very silly person. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I found your article on the credential's of "Dr" Carl Baugh. While I strongly disagree with "Dr" Baugh's stance on the age of the Earth, organic evolution etc. I thought in the interest of fairness I might point out that Jack Horner one of the foremost dinosaur paleontologists in North America holds no official degree beyonnd a high school diploma and holds an honorary PhD From the University of Montana. Perhaps I misunderstood the context of the article as I only briefly skimmed over it please feel to e-mail me if this is the case. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood Redux |
Response: | Having or not
having a degree is not the issue. Carl Baugh claims to have
degrees that are unaccredited and does not readily admit this
fact. This is a regular pattern found amongst "creation science"
advocates as documented in "Some
Questionable Creationist Credentials."
The only reason I can immagine they do this is to try and add some "shine" to their presentations. This technique was immortalized by the eminent musicologist and brass band conductor, Professor Harold Hill. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | you claim that the age (refered to The Age of the Earth FAQ) is accepted by scientist, but is it true |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Ancient Molecules and Modern Myths |
Response: | Yes.
Thanks for your question. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have been doing a great deal of research on several areas which are addressed on your site. I must say that your position is very well delivered. You specify the position of the opposition (young earth supporters (of which I am one)) and then detail the position against those arguments very thouroughly. Additionally, you provide significany documentation of sources and other suggested references. Very refreshing. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Ancient Molecules and Modern Myths |
Response: | Thank you. I found your note quite refreshing as well. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | if man evolved from apes, why are there still apes? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood and the Young Earth |
Response: | I had always
assumed that this particular question was a joke, but I recently
was corrected on this. It has been answered farily often in the
TalkOrigins Feedback section over the years, and I invite you to
use the search function to compare my answer with those others.
First, humans did not evolve from any modern apes. We share a common ancestor with the other modern apes. An analogy I have found useful for some people is in the form of a question, "If you were born of your parents how can you have cousins?" Secondly, there are no particular evolutionary targets- it is not the 'goal' of primates to become human. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I am looking for someone who can explain to me an apparent contradiction on the Answers in Genesis website. I was recently catching up on my AiG reading and came across the October 26th article, Jumping wallaby genes and post-Flood speciation, which pointed out that, “The very rapid genetic changes caused by TEs [transitional elements] could help explain the formation of the variants from the original kinds on Noah’s Ark in the relatively short biblical time frame.” However, on September 5th the article Chimp genome sequence very different from man used “Haldane’s Dilemma” to show that evolution from chimp to man was not possible. In other words, 6 thousand years is enough time to differentiate “cat kind” but 6 million years is not enough time to differentiate “ape kind.” I do not know much about genetics, so there may be a subtle distinction between these two examples that I am missing. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The subtle
distinction is that Answers in Genesis need sudden evolution to
explain how everything could have fit on one small Ark, and the
inability of evolution to explain why humans are distinct from
apes.
I trust this helps. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I stumbled upon your website quite randomly (actually through the StumbleUpon program) and I was very impressed by the quality of the essays on this site. A few weeks ago I read some of the essays on the creationism.org site and sent a quick e-mail to Thomas Heinze. I have been enganged in a correspondence with him ever since. I would like to send the transcripsts of those e-mails to you, please contact me and I will foward those e-mails to you so that you can use them on your site. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Unless you have Mr Heinze's permission to make the correspondence public, you can't do this. He retains copyright to anything he has written in private. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | KD |
Comment: | In my professional
capacity as a college educator, I am frustrated with the word
“complexity,” not just in the limited sense of the
Black Box debate, but in all its instances.
In complexity mathematics, complexity is ultimately a measure of magnitude. A problem is P or NP if the quantity of steps to its solution(s) is bounded by some order of magnitude of the problem’s size. Complexity, then, for that most militaristic of disciplines, answers the question ‘how much?’ and specifically, answers the question ‘how much work is required to produce a solution (set)?’ In pure mathematics, the ‘steps toward solution(s)’ are work performed by a human. In applied mathematics, the ‘steps’ may represent a natural process, in which case the ‘steps” complexity is a measure of work expressible in ergs. Either way, the word ‘complexity’ is a pseudonym for ‘quantity.’ But complex things, whatever they are, have qualities in addition to “muchness.” They also have transformational properties–high quantities of dependence, interdependence, interaction, or interrelation. Again, without reference to concrete instances, ‘complexity’ in all these abstract aspects is reducible to quantity. A single IF→THEN relationship is not complex, by itself. Is it? ‘Complexity’ is a term which includes in its semantic foundations the presumption of agential limitation. A process, like reading, which is complex to a five year old, is not complex to an adult. Nor are cellular functions, which I find dauntingly complex, at all so to practicing cellular biologists. Whenever I think of something as complex, I can’t also but help think of it as possessing my candidate replacement term, contingency. What I like about this alternative word is that it contains no reference to any agential bias. If humidity and temperature combine with pressure, in certain further contingent ways, it will rain. Otherwise not. Fluid dynamicists are tempted to call a thunderstorm a ‘complex’ dynamical system. Isn’t a thunderstorm more virtuously described as a ‘contingent’ dynamical system? I think that what really happens in public dialogue is that when the quantity of contingent processes that make a thing a thing exceed our brains’ well-known chunking capacity, we bail out to the emotional appeal of calling it ‘complex.’ This term has no materialistically rigorous definition, as far as I know. The term always includes an acknowledgment, however tacit, of insufficiency. ‘Complex’ relative to what? is the form of the logical pass/fail question. To be rigorous scientists, as well as rigorous debaters, we should eschew our emotional fascinations with the grandeur or challenge of our respective fields which lead us to use the term ‘complex’ at all. The reason I am submitting this is because after the Black Box debate, an astonishing number of scientists still use this term as a saltire to ward off the blows of attack, or as a signal word to indicate what great minds they must have to deal with such labyrinthine mysteries. Even the much-maligned Gould uses it in his morphospace diagram, with ‘complexity’ increasing to the right side. What is really increasing, that can be measured, is contingency. If I don’t list every example of complexity I can think of, someone will likely be able to think of a counter-example, and I would welcome that. I would like to see a closely-reasoned example of when the term ‘complex’ can be applied in a formally operant way that makes no appeal to agential relativity. Otherwise, if we borrow ‘contingency’ from the philosophers, or ‘conditionality’ from the technologists, I think we would save ourselves quite a bit of wasted finger-effort, typing away at terministic mercury. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | As a philosopher,
I have to agree with this. Terms of qualitative distinction turn
out to be quantitative. Complexity has a metric in
Kolmogorov-Chaintin theory, but this is a notional measure. In
biology, complexity usually means "hard to describe".
Something is contingent in philosophy if it is not logically necessary. That is, when you have to use a modal operator like "possibly". And biological organisms are certainly contingent in that regard. But the sort of contingency mentioned, for example, by Gould, when talking about evolution, is a physical contingency. It means something like "an outcome that depends on extraneous conditions". Human evolution, on this view, is contingent because the laws of physics, chemistry and biological evolution did not require the evolution of humans. In this sense, all biology is contingent, because it could have (physically speaking) been otherwise. It's like doing "what-if" history (what if Hitler had died at birth, sort of thing); there is nothing in the theory of evolution that prohibits a different outcome. So I don't think it's a replacement term for "complexity", but it is certainly a good point to make about evolution. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | you dong give any profe |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Excellent
resource! I've used it many times, but decided to finally give
some feedback. Three points:
1) Rather than 'Index to Creationist Claims' it should say 'Index to Creationist Claims and Outrageous Bare-faced Lies', because that's what many are. But I guess we should try to be diplomatic. 2) I have noticed at least once in the responses to claims that you used the phrase 'believe in evolution'. Actually, I doubt that any of you 'believe in' evolution. Evolution is a scientific theory, and as such it is dependant upon evidence, and independant of belief. We do not 'believe in evolution', we 'accept the evidence for evolution'. If someone can provide better evidence for another theory then we may accept that. The point may seem subtle, but I think the distinction is important when discussing the issue. 3) Transitional fossils - perhaps the smelliest red herring dredged up by creationists. Every species that exists, or has ever existed, is a transitional species, between what it was, and what it may become if evolution keeps working on it. What the creationists want are chimeras. Are they trying to prise the bill off a platypus? Keep up the fight! |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I found your article very interesting, however although you have plenty of (maybe even too much) evidence supporting your statement i do nor understand how evolution can be a fact if there is no proof of it's mechanism. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Excuse me? There's rather a lot of evidence concerning changes in populations due to both natural selection and genetic drift. Nor does the assertion make sense otherwise, since gravity nicely illustrates a phenomenon that is factual with far less evidence bearing upon a mechanism by which it operates. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | In response to
CH030 and the claim that a knowing and loving God could not
possibly allow suffering and hell:
In short, I feel like there are two reasons why one cannot say that God cannot exist or cannot be the christian God because there is suffering in the world. First, indeed christians claim God to be all-knowing and loving--but we also acknowledge that an all-good God must be a JUST God. The basic problem is that, if God is perfect and we are sinful, we cannot exist together (aka, go to heaven). Now, what your argument says is this: even if the claim in the previous sentence is true, and all-loving and all-powerful God should just let us into heaven anyways. However, this does not work because God is also just--there must be a punishment for our sinfulness. Crimes cannot simply go unpunished--that would lead to chaos. I dont think anybody would say that we should just "be loving" and quit putting sex-offenders, murderers, or even shop-lifters in jail (or whatever the sentence is for shop-lifting). In the same way, there must be punishment for our sins. The beautiful thing about God is that he found a way to make this requirement for atonement and his perfect love for us work together. He made the perfect solution--the sacrifice of Jesus, the only perfect sacrifice, to take on our sins and our punishment (death being the punishment for sin). This allows both of these laws to work together. However, this still doesnt quite explain why some people could still not go to heaven. The other amazing thing about God is that he gave us the power to make our own decisions. Which is better--to force somebody to choose you, or to lay the options out before them and allow them to choose you on their own accord? I think the answer is obvious to all. This is beautiful, indeed. My last point relates to this freedom to choose. I think many of us need to re-work the way we think about things. We get mad at God for allowing suffering (which is crazy to me, considering the fact that he went through more suffering than any man could ever imagine when he came down as Jesus). However, the simple fact is that we are the ones who brought on any evil in this world. Adam and Eve brought sin into this world, consequently bringing suffering. One might say "if God knew we would mess up then why did he even create us?" Once again, i think the answer is found in freedom to choose. Is it better for a parent to hide the cookie jar so the child never learns whether or not its okay to go in it? Or is it better to leave the cookie jar on the counter so that the child can make his/her own choice and LEARN? While parents should always guide their children, we all hate the parents that dont ever let their child make their own decisions. God gave us the ultimate honor by allowing us to choose what to do. However, once again, we have chosen sin. WE ARE THE ONES THAT SIN, SO WE ARE THE ONES THAT HAVE ALLOWED SUFFERING. And, once again, God is perfect in love and has provided a way out for us through the sacrifice and resurrection of Jesus. To understand this more, i challenge whoever reads this to read the excerpt found in the following link: http://jtothesstaff.blogspot.com/2005/03/understanding-salvation.html#comments. Thank you for reading this response!!! I know that this does not explain everything. However, i would also say that for us to understand anything we must get revelation from God. Any response would be appreciated, as we are all constantly learning and must be sharpened by one another. I pray blessings over whoever reads this and the peace of Jesus Christ! --Luke Oltmans |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | First, justice
does not require punishment. If someone has a brain tumor that
causes him to act violently, the moral thing to do is to remove
the tumor, not to punish the person.
Second, an infinite punishment is not appropriate for a finite crime. Third, not all suffering is our fault. At least, it does not make sense to me that Adam had the power to create malaria, trichinosis, giardia, and innumerable other diseases. Such power would make Adam a god, which seems rather unbiblical. Finally, even if Adam and Eve did bring sin into the world, others do not deserve punishment for their act. I do not deny that people make mistakes and that those mistakes cause suffering. That much is obvious, even without the Bible. The Bible has some valuable things to say about forgiveness in response to those mistakes. Let us not lose track of this message in the weaving of complicated stories about the origin of sin and judgment. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | You have a great site here and I wish it would be more out in the media for people to see. The young earth fanatics get too much air time! Anyone with some common sense can see with the knowledge of science these days that evolution is more fact that theory. I was listening to one young earth preacher and said mostly propoganda but there is one issue that he said about Greenland layers of ice that stuck in my head. About the Plane crash in 1942. www.thelostsquadron.com/museum.html The plane was recovered in 1992 retreived from below 268 feet of ice. How was it that it was buried in so much ice in 50 years. I know how areas get a lot of snow fall every year then melt, and some years it doesn't all melt. But the amount does seem extreme. Can you help me on this issue? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | This is addressed
in the Index and in various
feedback responses:
February 2002, July 2003, and March 1999. The short answer is that the squadron landed in flowing ice near the coast. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | No one believes your wicked lies. Hurry up and go back to hell. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Your website is execellent. For the sake of fairness, I have tried to be fair and give the creationists the chance to give their arguements before making up my mind. Having read up on the facts, true science wins in my book. The more I read up on the creationist claims the more I realize that these people are advocating a pseudoscience. While science reviews the facts before drawing conclusions, Young Earth Creationists really are just trying to twist the facts to support their foregone conclusion. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | sozzledboot |
Comment: | Greetings:
I'm curious about something, purely hypothetical of course but, what difference would it make to an evolutionist if it could be demonstrated that existing ideas, facts, and theories regarding evolution are incorrect? I mean, is there a plan of action that the evolutionist imagines him/her self implementing in the event of a catastrophic failure of an evolutuionary worldview? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | Absolutely. We
call it science. How it works in such a case is that lots of
educated, experienced specialists try to come up with alternative
explanations, go study the things being explained, and test out
those explanations to see if they hold up.
So fortunately, if ever evolutionary biology collapsed, we'd be OK, although temporarily unable to answer some questions. Do let us know if that happens, OK? Oh, and we'd all have to eat lots of choc chip icecream as a solace. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I just found your website and I can’t get enough of it! Thanks for all the hard work. I have recently been debating evolution with a staunch creationist. Of course the usual arguments have come up – the theory is unproven; it leads to racism and eugenics; how can you trust in the scientific process since theories are constantly changing, etc. Another argument (one I had not heard before) is that the teaching of evolution leads to secularism, which then leads to a decline in population growth. The examples that were used were specifically Germany and Russia. China and Korea were also mentioned. Any ideas on how to respond to this (and I use the term loosely) line of reasoning? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You mean, apart
from snorting Coke through your nose in derision?
It's rather odd that evolution has been taught for many years in a range of countries, and yet they are all just as religious as they were when it started. And what's more, populations haven't declined (although in developed countries, and to an extent in developing countries, population growth has slowed with the improvements in lifestyle, survival rates of children, and health care). There is a fallacy known as the Confusion of Correlation and Causation (or a Type I Error) in statistics. It is well exemplified by the joke that global warming has increased as the number of pirates decreased, therefore the latter causes the former. The reasons for a decline in birth rate have to do with the fact that parents in these circumstances have a much better chance of getting their kids to live and do well, and so they have fewer children. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | you cannot be in place of GOD.You are very insultive.Even if if i don not know much about evolution you should not be insultive. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Webster |
Comment: | An evolutionist's
glossary of terms:
1) Abiogenesis - literally: without a living beginning. Therefore, not created by a living Being but spontaneously arose from inanimate matter eons ago... or might have come from space aliens. The source of the inanimate matter is not exactly known but is theorized to have come from zero matter occupying zero volume. The zero matter spontaneously exploded to form everything we see. 2) Aliens - beings from another part of space who may have seeded life onto earth. Source of the aliens is unknown, perhaps aliens who seeded them, who seeded them, who seeded them... Sorry, no ultimate origins available. 3) Science - the only reliable source of truth. 4) Evolution - the foundation for all other forms of science, without which no other forms of science would make sense. Also, a critical subject matter for high school students to study. Life in the real world would be impossible without the study of evolution. 4) History - we don't know, but it has nothing to do with truth. Science holds that ground. 5) Punctuated Equilibrium - a Latin term that literally means, "we can't explain the Cambrian explosion so we'll have to invent a $20 term to hoodwink people into believing we know what we're talking about". 6) Morality - Undefined 7) Creationist - an uneducated buffoon, one who denies truth (see also "science"); one who hates science for whatever reason; one who believes a Supreme Being, rather than blind chance is responsible not only for life but for everything mankind knows to exist. But mainly, a buffoon. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | "Webster" is only about a dozen years too late. Been there, done that. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | In the "Index to
Creationist Claims", Claim CB620:
http://www.talkorigins.org/indexcc/CB/CB620.html The argument is basically correct, but not part 2. You say "the population growth from 1900 to 2000 has been closer to 0.132 percent per year". No, you've slipped a decimal place. You must mean 1.32 percent per year. 0.132 percent means a population doubling in 525 years; that's way too small! |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Oops. Thanks for
bringing that to my attention. I'll change it to the population
growth from 1000 to 1800, which is probably more representative
of long-term population growth anyway. The population growth was
0.1227% per year over that period (from 340 million to 907
million).
I double-checked my math this time. But then, I thought I double-checked last time, too. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Edward |
Comment: | The February
letter of Zackary Lehocki and subsequent response by Wesley
Elsberry is quite revealing. Is it not obvious that the letter
was written by someone seeking to make Creationists look like
idiots with the misspellings and so forth? And Elsberry seems
quite content to answer as though he assumes the letter is
legitimate.
Integrity is expected, but, unfortunately, would appear to be in short supply with the talkorigins staff. C'mon guys... |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Dino Blood Redux |
Response: | The problem is
naturally that the extreme satiric version of creationism is
indistinguishable from "real" creationism. As a matter of fact,
the poor use of English, fact, and reasoning exhibited in the
feedback letter you mentioned attributed to Zackary Lehocki is
not actually outstanding when compared to the sorts of writing
one finds generally common on creationist bulletin boards and
list servers. We could post dozens of similar epistles sent here
every month. All Brother Zack forgot to include was that we will
all burn in Hell while he is in Heaven. Further, Dr. Elsberry did
not disparage Brother Zack as you have, but provided a thorough
debunking of the falsehoods contained in the feedback letter.
If you found Zackary embarassing, I suggest that you work harder with the creationist minions. If you can't teach science, try to teach English. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Thanks for
publishing one of my posts last month - but what about the other
two? I am particularly concerned that the response to CA662 was
not published, as it is important that historical accuracy does
not become a victim of the evolution/creation debate.
Thank you. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | We don't publish every feedback response - it would be too long. But be assured that we read them all. Mark Isaak will have seen it. Thanks for your response. We really do appreciate it. |