Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | This site
filled with lies. There is no “proof” of
evolution! Darwin said this himself:
“NOT ONE CHANGE OF SPECIES INTO ANOTHER IS ON RECORD. We cannot prove that a single species has ever changed." - Charles Darwin The only proof evolutionists can offer are recession genes showing up through the years. This is not proof that a man is related to an ape, and his dog is in fact his distant cousin. Also, the fossils record showing “Lucy” (a chimpanzee) to modem man has been debunked as a over exaggeration on the part of artist and misinterpreted by biologists. The simple truth is the Theory of Evolution violate the Law of Bio Genesis (life only comes from life), the second law of Thermo Dynamics (matter becomes more disorganized over time), has zero fossil proof, require impossible mathematics to work, relies on an old Earth when proof points to a young Earth (light is not constant & the Sun is growing smaller by 5 feet a day), and was made up by and pushed by people who main agenda is to destroy the belief in God. The intended result of Evolution is for people to believe that they are nothing more then glorified apes and not a creation of God. It does a terrific job. A history of evolution and the decline of society go hand and hand. Evolutions entered schools shortly before WWI. Many states and most of the southern states, passed laws preventing the study of evolution in school while of the same time passing law promoting bible studies. After the ACLU won the fight of the made up idea of Church and State (in the 1840's, the courts supported Bible study in public schools!), the evolution was pushed in public schools and taught as a fact, not as a theory. The results of this are clear. Young people have little regards to their lives or to the lives of others. Parents “pawn off" their children to satisfy their materialistic desires. People who are faithfully are losing faith and unwilling to standup for their beliefs. These are things that can’t be denied. It’s all so easy to see with an open mind that Evolution is the single most harmful lie in society today. You just have to look at Evolution for what is; A theory without any proof, taught in schools as an fact, that violates two scientific laws, rejected by scientists, and being pushed by people who deny God for the stole propose of instilling the belief in the general population that they are nothing more then a glorified ape. I think this quote says it best: "If you tell a lie long enough, loud enough, and often enough, the people will believe it." - Adolf Hitler |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The quote
from Darwin is incorrect. It is quote number 82 in our new
FAQ, The Quote
Mine Project: Or, Lies, Damned Lies and Quote Mines.
It is a puzzle how one should respond to this kind of thing. We could track down what Darwin really said; to show how to research the views of nineteenth century scientists; and as a contrast to the creationist technique of passing erroneous quotes from one to another without ever looking them up. And then there is the problem that anything from Darwin is from the nineteenth century. It may have been true then that there was no instance of speciation on record: it is certainly false now. And then we still have an avalanche of errors in the rest of the feedback. Sigh. A responder's work is never done. Most creationists using this misquote give no reference. When they do, it is usually to "Life and Letters". This is a collection of primary source materials collected and edited by Darwin's son, in two volumes. They are available on-line from the Gutenburg project. One creationist source, the Handbook of Personal Evangelism, indicates page 210 of Volume 1. Nothing of the kind appears on that page. However, in Volume 2, on page 210, in a letter to G. Benthan written in 1863, we have this in a postscript: The editorial remark in square brackets is, I think, due to Darwin's son Francis, who edited the collection. To read about many instances of speciation observed since Darwin’s time, see Observed Instances of Speciation and Some More Observed Speciation Events. If you are not inclined to trust anything told to you from a scientific perspective, you may find Answers in Genesis more persuasive. From Speciation Conference Brings Good News for Creationists, by Carl Wieland (AiG CEO): Weiland’s point — which is quite true — is that creationists require enormous numbers of new species to form in order to account for observed diversity to arise from the animals (presumably) in Noah’s Ark. (I am not endorsing the whole article. Much of it is nonsense.) As for the rest of the feedback: it is false that the only proof of evolution is recessive genes. See, for example, 29+ Evidences for Macroevolution, and many other files in the archive. It is false that Lucy is a chimpanzee, or that Lucy has been debunked. Lucy remains a superb Australopithecine fossil, trivially distinguished from a chimpanzee. There is a wealth of fossil evidence both prior to and subsequent to Lucy. Where the nonsense about an artist comes from I have no idea. No creationist source to my knowledge says anything about artists in this context; artists have nothing whatsoever to do with the matter. Evolution works entirely with life from life; the reader has mixed up models and is thinking of biogenesis. Evolution does not conflict with any thermodynamic laws. The claim about the Sun shrinking by five feet per day is an old creationist error. See also The Legend of the Shrinking Sun by the ASA. The paranoia about atheistic agendas and declining morals is not persuasive when presented by someone who takes so little care to check their own accuracy. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | As a 3rd year chemistry major, I'm fueled by sound biochemical arguements toward evolution. I have read Michael Behe's book Darwin's Black Box and have not found the arguements he has made refuted anywhere. One thing I'm rather disgusted at when looking specifically at the scientific community is the pride they have toward their way of thinking. As you indicate numerous times on your website, it is the creationist point of view that usually sits at the pride side of the platform. I thought this website was going to give a solid view of both sides of the evolution debate. However, I'm not surprised that you propagate only the pro-evolution stance. This sort of stance is a growing trend among those who have a heart full of vial pride. As a young scientist seeking answers, I do not want to turn out like the people that put this website together. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Our page on Michael Behe has links
to four FAQs that address his arguments. There are also
links to Behe's own pages, to other off-site articles, to
two more FAQs that touch on Behe's ideas as a secondary
topic, and to two post-of-the-month articles from
talk.origins which address his ideas.
This archive does give a solid and comprehensive view of all sides of the evolution debate, and we keep trying to extend it and make it more thorough. It does not give the view from all sides; it looks at the various sides as carefully and rigorously as we can. (There are more than two sides. Behe does not reject an old earth or the principle of common ancestry.) Scientists do not only ask questions. They also answer them. This site endorses answers which have been accepted as valid by the mainstream scientific community. We consider that science properly applied validates those answers. Pride has little to do with it. Scientists are also good at finding errors within their own ranks, and recognizing what we don't know as yet. It is fine to be skeptical of pronouncements from anyone; scientist or otherwise. If you are not yet satisfied with the answers given, then you should continue to check it out. We have plenty of links to the advocates of other views; and you can find more yourself. But in the end, if you ever find answers to your questions — and surely you recognize that finding answers is possible — you also will have to decide which side gives the solid view of the matter. It can't be all of them. Without apology or qualification we endorse the following plain statement: (Well, perhaps one qualification. Many of us are not from the USA, so omit "our nation's" from the last sentence.) Is that statement really the accepted view within the scientific community? To an overwhelming extent, yes. It has been signed by 400 scientists named Steve. I wish you well as you seek answers. I hope you are also willing to find them. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I know you
mention NOT to tell you that the Earth isn't Flat, and that
you know it is a sphere.
Actually, I'm writing to tell you it's not a sphere either. It is a Spheroid, since it's not equatorially dimensional. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Open up the February 2003 feedback and search for "spheroid". That's not news to us, either. Yours in pedanticism, Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | ? |
Comment: | so in your last feedback you edidted his response? wow big move on your part *insert sarcasm smiley here* insteadm of deleting it you could have answered his question your editing his right to free speech and whats inaapropriate content to you? the fact that god is real? oh and a phd means nothing unless you back god you know why? because he gave you that phd. he made the materials used to make the phd papers. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I assume that this refers to my response to the plagiarized text posted by Tim Ferris. I certainly did trim Ferris's post. I'm not in the habit of letting plagiarism slide. "?" is barking up the wrong tree with the assertion that I'm a God-denier. It is because I'm not a God-denier that the patent dishonesty of many antievolutionists, including many a plagiarist, seems so despicable to me. It's also part of the student rules at Texas A&M University, where I earned my Ph.D.:
Plagiarism is stealing. I would be amused by the squirming contortions that antievolutionist plagiarists go through to justify their unjustifiable acts of lying, but in the end it is sad to see all these people with degaussed moral compasses. The TalkOrigins Archive already addresses Jehovah's Witness materials ([1], [2], and [3]). The Archive also has materials on the age of the earth which touch upon the cosmological issues raised in the Jehovah's Witness text. It's not like the plagiarized material posted by Ferris was in any way a novelty. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I understand that you are pleading unfairness as your excuse for not debating a sharp, charismatic creation-scientist, especially a creationist as capable Dr. Kent Hovind. It is very hard for me to believe that you could not arrange an "unbiased debate." Debate him. The argument that creationist's questions take to long to refute is an extremely poor one. That is always used by the group that has no proof for their ideas. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
If Kent Hovind had something of scientific import to say, he would be publishing papers in the peer-reviewed literature. He would at least be submitting such for review. But Hovind doesn't have anything to say about scientific matters that would be of interest to scientists. I'm fine with the idea of discussing issues with Hovind -- in writing. Anytime he feels like responding to my essay on Hovind's incompetence in the field of genetics, I'll make time to discuss it. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Several of my friends from the Atheist Community of Austin testified at the Texas State Board of Education hearings on September 10. We have some of the most extensive coverage of the hearings on the web, including a lengthy report and audio recordings of many speeches. Hope your readers will check it out. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I'm all for coverage of these hearings. Unlike science, where the evidence can exclude certain conjectures conclusively, socio-political issues can remain contentious despite certain factions having no evidential basis for their stances. That said, I will remind readers that acceptance of evolutionary biology does not necessitate rejecting religious belief. Please also see our God and Evolution FAQ. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | you sound so smart... unfortunately for you, God is alot smarter and won't accept your technical jargon as a passage to His Kingdom |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I don't recall anything in the scriptures saying that ignorance got anyone a pass into heaven, either. Please have a look at the God and Evolution FAQ for how accepting evolutionary biology does not equate to rejecting God. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | First off,
thanks for all your hard work in creating and maintaining
this site! It's a wonderful resource.
What I would like to know is, do you have any links to sites that would explain evolution to children ages 6 ~ 9? I didn't find an easy reference to guide me towards references that would be good for kids. (It would probably also be good to have references for children 10+ as well.) |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | One great
site is Enchanted
Learning, which has material for children of all ages
on a wealth of topics. You can plug evolution into
their search engine and get many relevant pages at all
kinds of levels.
Especially good is their section on Dinosaurs. Children often find dinosaurs especially interesting, and the information available is useful to adults as well. I have used it as a resource myself. They also have a page of Classroom Activities For Preschool, Kindergarten, and Early Elementary School Grades (K-2). More generally, they have a feature called Little Explorers, which is intended to help young children surf for topics they find interesting, using a picture dictionary with links. I don't know how well it will work for children, but check it out. Lots of biology related stuff is there, and subjects like extinction and deep time and classification shows up very naturally. Children are often good at finding out about what interests them. The only reason to worry about evolution in particular is if children are being fed a pile of misinformation on the matter of origins. If that is a problem, it is good to give childen a background in astronomy and earth sciences as well; both of which they find naturally interesting. Children who know about the Earth and the Universe are well equipped to see the absurdity of creationist notions. So you may also like to check out Zoom Astronomy and Introduction to the Earth. (This was not on our list of links, but I have just now submitted Zoom Dinosaurs for inclusion.) |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Your latest addition, "Index To Creationist Claims" is fantastic. There is so much to learn and so little time that 'compendiums' like these are priceless. I appreciate the short, pointed answers and extensive references. Kudos to everyone who made the "Index" a reality. You guys really bring to life the awe and excitement of discovery, nature, and science in general. We are forever indebted to you! |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thank you very much. This index is primarily the work of Mark Isaak, and we at the archive are indebted to him for his efforts. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Kevin Klein |
Comment: | My feedback: Sort the monthly feedback index in reverse chronological order! Those of us who regularly read the monthly feedback for entertainment purposes find it tedious to scroll to the bottom of the page every time. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Hmmm. I'll borrow a cliche' from sports: Maybe next year. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Excellent
site. An arguement I use with creationists who dispute
evolution (how could that possibly happen, it's
unimaginable (in their real of imaginable time frame (one
generation))) I like to use the following arguement.
In high school calculus, it's easy to prove that the harmonic series diverges ( Sum 1/i, i=1, infinity ), that the alternating series converges ( Sum 1/i * (-1)^i, i=1, infinity ) Then I ask them, what if you take the alternating series above and rearrange the terms? what do you get. It's not too hard to prove you can converge to any integer [ - infinity, infinity ] Now imagine that! --thx -- ricka (probably need to clean that arg up a bit) |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
That's interesting, but I fear that I haven't grasped the force of the argument that you obviously see in it. Making mathematical formulae sit up and beg doesn't necessarily mean that reality follows. That still requires taking a look at the evidence, which is anathema to antievolutionists. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Your article regarding the beetle was interesting. All those steps so neatly falling into place. Tell me, please, why the beetle would continue to evolve all the way to its present state if simple secretions were enough to ward off predators in the first place? Like every other macroevolutionary arguement, this one relies upon the usual need for all the simple parts to just morph into more complex ones. Where did this information come from? It is a fact that no new information has ever been created; only lost or mutated downward. Why are you so afraid of the truth? You know God made these things. Need help finding answers? Try a bible or even WWW.AnswersinGenesis. I hope to see you in Heaven! |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Beetles
would continue to evolve because those that evolve an even
more effective defense leave more offspring than those
whose defense is not quite so good.
The information came from the environment. It is falsehood that no new information has ever formed. "Who has not found the Heaven -- below -- |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Math |
Comment: | Love the
site, it has helped me in many "discussions" on Evolution
vs. Creation.
When "discussing" with creationists I have found that most of my work consists of searching out quotes they have given me and finding out they where: a.) Changed around to fit what they want said. b.) Quoted out of context as to fit what they want said. Either way, I was wondering if you have ever considered establishing some form of datebase (small at first of course, but growing all the time) with quotes that are commonly misused by creationists (out of context or otherwise)? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | Aha! We have
finally anticipated a request for a FAQ!
The inestimable John Pieret has done just this thing in the The Quote Mine Project: or, Lies, Damned Lies, and Quote Mines pages. If you find any quotes we haven't covered, send us the full quote and details of where it is found, and we will chase it up and place it on the page. Full kudos to John for this work. Glad to see it is useful. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | This my opinion. The critic of C.B.,took one too many "BLOTTER" trips. nothin'U said made 'uhbittasense'dude. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Judging by the grammar, or lack of it, this looks like projection on the reader's part. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Thank you
for the "Index of Creationist Claims" page!
It sums up all the misunderstandings, fallacies and outright lies nicely. Very useful and educational. The bibliographies are an excellent addition, too. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Shame on you for trying to block the truth. If something is found to be factual, what right do you have to try to stop this from getting out. There are many things that are not as they seem and there are many truths being blocked by people like you who must be afraid of the truth. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I'm afraid that the reader must have us confused with somebody else. We haven't "blocked" anything, and certainly have no interest in blocking truth. The truth is that antievolution arguments are mostly very bad indeed, and we go to some effort to demonstrate why those antievolution arguments are often less than truthful. We also link directly to those arguments when they are offered online. There's no "blocking" going on here. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | You say evolutionist beliefs and scientific studies are fact, but you do not give the scientific reasons why they are "fact". The reader is just supposed to undoubtedly believe everything you say because... |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Could the reader be less specific? That seems doubtful. Many, if not most, of the FAQs and essays on the TalkOrigins Archive utilize a little-known convention called references. These references are bits of text that specify other materials that may be found in a big building called a library. To the initiated, references and libraries are part of a secret means of gaining knowledge called, arcanely enough, research. It involves thinking of mechanisms of how things might work, going out and looking at evidence which might bear on whether the proposed mechanism could possibly work, writing up a description of how the mechanism was tested and how the test turned out, and exchanging views in print with other researchers who might disagree. This process, and why it forms an adequate epistemology, seems to be a complete mystery to many an antievolutionist. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Cardinal Spank |
Comment: | In the
september feedback you discuss "evolution is change in
allele frequency" (Wilkins). Absolutely creationist
re-definition must not be pandered to, but you must be
aware how important it is to avoid trying to prove anything
by referencing this definition. We must avoid the
appearance of "argument by slick wordplay" because it is
something we are hoping to lift creationists above.
But additionally, my discomfort with this definition is that it doesn't address something very important to creationists' (and others') understanding of evolutionary change - the addition of new alleles to the population and, less importantly, the removal of alleles. Without this addition, allele frequency change BY ITSELF (while important and significant) doesn't seem to change the set of forms which can arise by random mating (given enough luck) and so I have a problem with your statement "...it implies that evolution will occur in the larger sense unless prevented..." because there is a hard barrier in a sense. Be assured I think feedback is the most accessible and accurate sample of mainstream scientific opinion on evolution, and I do my best to encourage creationists to visit. Most of them need education much more than they need an argument. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | Thank you for pointing this out. The allele frequency definition can sound just like natural selection is going to maintain alleles at or around a point, unless you note well that alleles can be eliminated (by both selection and drift), and that novel alleles can arise (through mutation), and that if you change alleles enough, you end up with a very different organism than when you began. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | A hypothesis must be tested by careful observation or experiments, reports of regularities, and systematic explanatory schemes (theories) to become a theory. Because evolutionary advocates have no way to test the hypothesis of evolution, how can they call evolution a theory? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Evolution is a systematic explanatory scheme (theory) that has been extensively tested and continues to be tested by careful observation and by detailed experiments. No other model explains the many relevant regularities that are observed. This archive, large though it may seem, touches upon only a fraction of the observation and experiment conducted over a century and a half. One place to start looking is 29+ Evidences for Macroevolution. It gives a brief insight into the breadth of observation you have missed. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I HAVE READ
AND REVIEWED YOUR WEBSITE. IT IS QUITE OBVIOUS THAT YOU
HAVE A LIMITED UNDERSTANDING OF THE PRINCIPLES OF
EVOLUTION. WITHOUT GETTING INTO GREAT DETAIL BECAUSE OF THE
LIMITATION OF SPACE AND TIME LET ME SAY THIS. EVOLUTION
DOES CERTAINLY DISPROVE THE EXISTANCE OF GOD. GOD IS A MAN
MADE CREATION WHOSE PURPOSE DEALS WITH THE SUPERSTITION AND
LACK OF KNOWLEDGE WHOSE PURPOSE WAS THE CONTROL OF PEOPLE
IN ANCIENT TIMES. EVOLUTION STATES THAT LIFE CAME INTO
EXISTANCE BECAUSE THE RIGHT CONDITIONS EXISTED ON THIS
PLANET. EVOLUTION ALSO STATES IT IS A PROCESS OF NATURAL
SELECTION AND RANDOM MUTATIONS THAT EVENTUALLY GAVE RISE TO
US HUMANS. RECENT ADVANCES IN MICROBIOLOGY, GENETIC
ENGINEERING AND FOSSIL DISCOVERIES ALL POINT TO THIS BEYOND
A SHADOW OF A DOUBT. RECENT DISCOVERIES ALSO SHOW THAT 99 %
OF LIFE THAT LIVED ON THIS PLANET IS NOW EXTINCT. FURTHER
EVIDENCE OF MASS EXTINCTIONS DUE TO CLIMATIC CHANGES AND
ASTEROID IMPACTS CLEARLY SHOWS THAT LIFE AND EVOLUTION IS
VERY SIMPLE STATED THAT ONLY THE BEST ADAPTED AND SOMETIMES
PLAIN LUCKY MANAGE TO SURVIVE. THE FOSSIL RECORD SHOWS MANY
EXAMPLES OF EVOLUTION AND LIFE IN VARIOUS STAGES OF
TRANSITION. THE FOSSIL RECORD DOES NOT SHOW THE WORK OF GOD
BUT CLEARLY SHOWS A TUMULTOUS GAME OF SURVIVAL AND
ADAPTION. THERE ARE NO EXAMPLES OR EVIDENCE OF A SUPREME
DESIGNER AT WORK. EVOLUTION IS A NATURAL PROCESS AND IT
DOES SURELY DISPROVES THE EXISTANCE OF A GOD OR GODS.
EVOLUTION IS CLEARLY A FACT THERE IS LIMITLESS EVIDENCE
THAT PROVES THIS. THE CORRECT QUESTION IS WILL HUMAN RACE
EVER OUT GROW THEIR CHILDISH FAIRY TALES.
OLEG DEI |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Hmm. It seems that they can't even find their CAPS LOCK keys. I'm not for either the path of ignorance favored by ideological antievolutionists or for the path of arrogance favored by evangelical atheists. Evolutionary biology is a well-supported science, but it doesn't make a dispositive case in theological issues as the reader asserts. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | WHY DO EVOLUTIONISTS HATE GOD SO MUCH? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Why don't you stop beating your wife? False premises don't make for good questions. Please read our God and Evolution FAQ. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | William Dembski has challenged all biologists at Baylor University to a debate to show that Intelligent design is not a scientific theory or directly pertinent to biology. |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | Odd. I thought the point of proposing a scientific theory was to show that it was a scientific theory, not for others to show it is not. It's an odd sort of theory that has no research program, no techniques, no explanations and no case studies... |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Jigbay |
Comment: | Dr. Kent Hovind has a generous offer on his website. Please stop by and check it out. $250,000.00 to anyone with evidence for their faith in evolution! That's a man who is willing to put his money where his mouth is. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | No, he's not. It's a rigged offer. See our articles on "Dr." Kent Hovind. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have
recently become aware of your web site. Thank you for your
time and energy. I have been taught the evolution position
all my life, yet i had a converstaiton with a college
friend who spoke of Intelligent Design. He recommended a
book by a professor named Behe. What are your thoughts on
this position? Do you have a position paper responding to
this? or a place I can go to read more on it? Thank you for
your thoughts!
Dean |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You can find
information on specific topics by using the Index, or the
Search engine, or the Site Outline, or the top
level FAQ; all of these
should let you find in short order our page on Irreducible Complexity and Michael
Behe.
If all of that is too difficult you can also ask the feedback column... |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Regarding the floods of Genesis: "God" left no evidence? How does one think sea shells get on mountain tops? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | We most
certainly do not say no evidence was left. On the contrary;
there is ample evidence for those willing to look
and see what is left for us to find in the rocks.
One of the first people to explore this question by careful examination of fossilized sea shells themselves is the great renaissance scholar Leonardo Da Vinci. There is a brief extract from his writings at our historical FAQ on Changing Views of the History of the Earth. Leonardo looked at the evidence, and saw mountaintop sea shells that were clearly deposited in a minimally disturbed shallow marine environment; not debris from a flood. The FAQ gives this quote from Leonardo's notebooks:
The short answer to your question as far as modern science has been able to discover is that shells get on mountain tops by being first fossilized in sedimentary deposits of a marine environment. Mountains formed subsequently; and an ancient sea bed becomes the top of a mountain. There are many discussions of Leonardo's geological insights on the web, and they generally describe him as a prescient genius who anticipated many insights from modern geology. This is only half the story. For more detail, I recommend the essay collection:
|
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | It is hard to believe you have an article on this website, where once again, the Islamists are allowed to bend facts and tell lies to make the Qu'ran seem like an all knowing document. Someone should tell these Islamists there is too much evidence showing how LITTLE the Biblical texts have changed in two thousand years. There is no evidence for their accusations at all, indeed the reverse is true. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I have but one question for the reader: Where might the objectionable article be? Please, feedback writers, give us a break and include the URL of the page you are writing to us about in your feedback letters. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Stephen M |
Comment: | This is a phenomenal site. You covered every argument of with perfect logic and clarity. I recommend this site to anyone and everyone |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | This is an excellent, invaluable site. I haven't done a thorough search of this site, but it would be nice to have an easy link to find the credentials of the authors of the articles. Of course the claims have to be evaluated on their own merits, but when I read an article, I'd like to be able to quickly find out whether the author is a professor, grad student, or simply someone really interested in the subject. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | This
question comes up from time to time, and I understand the
interest. However, it has consistently been the position of
the archive that we do not require or keep a log of
credentials. Some authors of files in this archive, by
their individual choice, give some credentials; but most
don't seem to bother.
A problem with this particular subject area is that a focus on credentials often ends up as a red herring. There are some notorious cases of bogus or worthless credentials; and we have documented instances of this. There are also notorious cases of people with excellent and legitimate credentials who, in spite of this, turn out pseudoscientific claptrap of no merit whatsoever. The upshot is that in this area, there is no real alternative to the hard work of checking arguments themselves. The credentials of some of our writers; including some who simply write under their own name with no further detail, turn out to be excellent and directly relevant. Some of our writers are interested amateurs. Some have become experts in a particular subject area simply by immersing themselves in all the relevant literature over an extended period, without ever obtaining formal qualifications. In all cases, the worth of the material depends on the arguments and evidence themselves; and can only properly be evaluated by the hard work of checking the information provided, checking the references, and following up on related literature. That is the basis of the peer review process. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I very much
enjoy your site; although I knew that Creationists were not
particularly thoughtful, I had no idea just how bad it was.
However, I was disturbed by the following from the "Index to Creationist
Claims:"
I am myself a Pagan, and a bit of a religion geek, so when those two combine you might well imagine that I know a fair amount about these deities. Tammuz is not a strength of mine, but I'm pretty sure that it took him considerably longer than two or three days to return to the world; at any rate, he did not rise by himself, but was instead brought back up by Astarte/Ishtar/Inanna. Osiris didn't rise at all. He was chopped into pieces by his brother Seth, and the pieces were scattered. His wife Isis scoured the world and put the pieces back together, all except for his penis, which I believe was eaten by a crocodile. Isis formed a new penis for him, and then reanimated him as lord of the dead. He does not, therefore, actually rise from the dead. Rather, he is reanimated in the land of the dead. This is the mythical representation of the hope of the Egyptians (at least the upper class; we don't know much about any of the others) that they too will be reanimated. But neither Osiris nor the Egyptian dead were believed to have come back to this world. In other worlds, Osiris didn't rise from the dead, and his reanimation took considerably longer than two or three days. Attis and Adonis are even more interesting. We have a fair amount of documentation on their worship, and we know that their deaths were commemorated and mourned. However, the interesting thing is that none of the early texts mention resurrection, only death. It is not until fairly deep into the Christian era (I believe second century) that we find mentions of resurrection. In short, if there was a connection between the beliefs surround these deities and those surrounding Jesus, it is most likely that the influence went from Christianity to Paganism, rather than the other way round. One of the links on your site is to a Creationist site of arguments Creationists shouldn't use. The Christian influence on Paganism argument is one that *non-*Creationists shouldn't use. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thanks very
much for your feedback, and especially from Mark Isaac, who
put the index together. We greatly appreciate help in
making this site as accurate as possible.
Your feedback was in relation to claim number CH101 (The Bible is inerrant). The extract you singled out has now been removed. The revised text uses a much less controvertial example of syncretism.
And here is some background for other readers of this column. David is a writer who has put together a very interesting web page on his own area of expertise. It is Ceisiwr Serith's Homepage, and includes some essays relating to religion in the ancient world. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | dude, you
are the gayest bunch of guys ive ever seen. How could human
beings that can learn things like nuclear fission, develop
aritificial intelligence, design and build robotics that
can walk, talk, and make decisions without the help of an
operator, evolve from lower animals? How in the world could
a little blob of one-celled goo turn into an ape, which
then learned how to walk and develop the theory of
relativity?
Conclusion: this site is gay, you guys are all fags, evolution sucks my nuts. be less official with your stuff on this site, too, MLA is queer. -gordon |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | I dub this Argumentum ab SouthPark. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | quick
comment-
Elsberry was refuting the mathematical impossibility of evolution and, I believe, went about it wrong. He made the point that the possibility of the sentence, "I am writing to you" has a one in 1.5 * 10^-48 chance of being typed by pounding on the keys. He goes on to say how foolish this number is. However, this method has a flaw- we do not type by randomly pounding on the key board. As I'm typing this, I am intelligently (somewhat, at least) thinking of what I want to say and of which keys will transfer those thoughts into words on my computer screen. Elsberry, with this method, actually provides fuel to the creationists' "intelligent design" theory. This states that the universe is too complex to have happened without some great mind behind it all. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I didn't "make the point" asserted by the reader. What is being referenced is my post on probability that shows that extreme improbabilities can be reached very shortly in considering human reproduction. That's a rather different discussion. Yes, typing is not accomplished by random pounding on the keyboard. However, I did not propose that method, and referred to other posts in that thread that took up that fallacy in some detail. The only way I see that this error could come about is if the reader were unfamiliar with the usual method of quoting previous messages in Usenet posts, which is to prepend a character like ">" before each quoted line. I doubt that my post gives any fuel to "intelligent design". At least, the reader appears incapable of providing the logic that would go from true premises to his desired conclusion. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I find this site extremely helpful. I am in junior high, and I frequently refer to this site for many useful information topics. However there is one thing that i wish to be added to this site to the benefit of everyone...i want there to be just one big topic on horses and their evolution, featuring pictures. i would find this very helpful...yet i am still pondering over the horses evolution and i am in dire need of some info! although I still find this site very helpful and rewarding. thank you all for this great site! sincrely, savannah |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I'm sure that we'd like to have that, too. Unfortunately, unless we can convince Bruce McFadden to contribute a super-FAQ on horse evolution, it is not likely to happen. Pictures are an especially difficult bit. Photographs are copyrighted materials. Many, if not most, institutions with fossil collections may restrict how photographs taken of their specimens may be distributed. But you should be able to find Bruce McFadden's excellent book on horse evolution at a library near you, or order it through interlibrary loan. Good luck with your studies. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have just encountered an example of natural selection in action, the critter involved is the imported fire ant For the past couple years I have used baits to control them. These baits use corn grit and soybean oil as the bait and a slow acting insecticide or insect growth regulator as the active ingredient eg AMDRO. This year I noticed the workers ignoring the bait Talking with the county agent I found i'm not alone with this it is found in many areas in central florida. It is pretty obvious that colonies that didn't like oil and corn grit survived and those that liked it died. I recently had a bag of ant bait spill while cleaning it up I noticed workers walking by it to dismember a cricket that had been killed in the door jam. If this trait has spread through the southeast US it might make a nice demostration of the power of natural selection. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Melanie |
Comment: | I just discovered this website today, and wanted to say what a pleasure it's been to read. I especially enjoyed the essays on the second law of thermodynamics. Thanks for the good work! |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | nine of your twelve popular hominids are nothing more than extinct apes and the other three are modern humans.The best explanation for rock strata is better explained by a universal flood than by the gradual death of organisms over millions of years.If you beleive that human life started 3 million years ago we would have 150,000 people living per a square inch.Explosions cause spontaneous degeneration, not spontaneous generation.All explosions decrease order and sructure-if you blow up a cigar factory you will not end up with a space shuttle. I am fifteen yrs. old and just learned most of this stuff today. I came into my faith hereditaraly (protestant) and my faith has steadily decreased, until last month. I guess what im trying to say is that if you're advocate of evolution go to google and type in "evidence against evolution" or something else along those lines like "evidence supporting god and creation".I think you will be surprised. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Taking points in order...
Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I just
wanted to say I found your website by accident earlier this
morning. I spent most of the day reading the FAQs, internet
links, and feedback journals and was quite enthralled with
the information provided both for and against evolution and
creation.
I also have to be honest and admit that I have always been a skeptic at heart about many of the things that have been taught to me in my many years in as a member of a southern baptist church but reading much of this material put the proverbial last nail in the coffin for me, so to speak. Sadly, most members of my church would never take the time to question the validity of such creationist claims and would take it solely on face value as spoken from their Pastor as a direct advocate from God or from peer pressure within the organization. The majority of Parishioners would never look for actual factual information on such subjects as this could very well and easily be construed as questioning God, the Bible, our religious leaders, or our church denomination as a whole. I do believe religion has an important role to play in the future and for good or worse religion will continue to play a prominent role in world politics and in society as a whole. I just hope that religions and many church leaders have the foresight to evolve along with the demands that society and science have and will continue to place upon its beliefs and institutions. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Something to
say whenever a creationist wants to ramble on with biblical
quotes and other results of quote mining:
"I hate quotations. Tell me what you know." -Ralph Waldo Emerson, Journals, 1843 |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Please don't make direct attacks on creationists. I try not to attack evolutionists so please do the same. No one likes a sore-winner (notice I am not assuming I am right nor am I assuming that I am wrong - openmindedness). |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
I'm all for openmindedness in polite society. Science classrooms, though, are not polite society. Science classrooms need to be filled with science, and to exclude those things which are not science. There are plenty of people who reject evolutionary biology for personal ideological reasons having to do with their understanding (or misunderstanding) of religion, and who also do not push to have their personal beliefs taught as if science in science classrooms. I have no beef with that class of person, and I certainly would not care to "attack" such a person. On the other hand, there are quite enough people who reject evolutionary biology (and much of the rest of science) in favor of their ideological predispositions, who have taken it upon themselves to attempt to force their non-scientific notions into science classrooms. They have aa number of ways of phrasing such requests: "creation science", "scientific creationism", "equal time", "balanced treatment", "intelligent design", "evidence against evolution", "teach the controversy", "academic freedom", and "viewpoint discrimination". These all amount to the same thing: have evolutionary biology treated differently from other science in the classroom and treat the alternative non-science proposed as if it were science. This latter class of people is working to harm the public welfare, with malice aforethought, and I for one see no point in "playing nice" with such miscreants. If they choose to put themselves in the thick of public policy disputes, then they need to accept the reality that those who disagree with them may well state their own case forcefully. Some measure of the extent of antievolution activity intersecting with efforts to influence public policy can be seen in posts at the Antievolution.org discussion board. The TalkOrigins Archive has resources like the FAQ on suspicious creationist credentials specifically because these people have made a point of flogging questionable, if not fraudulent, credentials as a means of impressing audiences to take their pronouncements as being authoritative on the issues. Your mileage may vary. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Having been
a lurker and occasional poster on T.O for many years I am
still amazed at the dedication of the regulars.
keep up the good work folks. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Gaël Lancelot |
Comment: | I think an
important weapon in the "agressive" Creationist arsenal is
scientific controversy. They try to cast science as
monolithic and all-knowing, and then try to knock it down
for not confirming to this role.
Maybe it is time for science to come out of the closet on that issue. Scientists argue. They doubt. They have controversies. And they should be proud of it, because that's one thing their adversaries don't. I think it is high time to raise public awareness of the extremely important level discontinuity and contreoversy plays in science. I work (as a historian of science) on the molecular wars of the 60s, where the synthetic theory of evolution was challenged as the central dogma of biology. Writing it like that, it might be used as a creationist argument, while it was actually two materialisms in conflict. Rather than hiding our past discrepancies, we should expose them for all to see, so that we could defuse any possible anti-scientific view of them. Oh, and of course, congratulations and thanks for your work. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | If evolution is valid, then why hasn't coelacanth evolved, between its supposed extinction, and its recent discovery? A period of apparently 220 mil yrs or so. And just how long does it take for a species of animal to evolve. Obviously it hasn't finished its evolutionary cycle, because it is not walking yet. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The
coelacanth has evolved significantly over the last 220
million years. The modern coelacanth is similar to fossils
coelacanths from about 70 million years ago, but certainly
not identical. They are a different genus. They most
certainly have evolved significantly over 220 million
years.
Coelacanths have evolved for life in deep water, and there is no such thing as an evolutionary tendency towards walking, or a specific evolutionary cycle. Species never finish evolving. Evolution is not something you can ever halt. See claim number CB930.1, "The coelacanth, thought extinct for ages, is still living.". Also relevent is the Sept 2002 POTM, on Fish Fossils. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I don't have an Internet News Server Account and therefore cannot access "General Enquiries". I have need of information: Am I free to c&p web pages from Talk Origins to various discussion groups providing the source is acknowledged by including the URL or the name of the web page's owner? I am regularly engaged in fervent exchanges with various enthusiastically creationist individuals who insist there are no pink giraffes on the dark side of the moon. But we know there are, don't we? I am anxious to access web pages that confirm my implacable belief. Yours faithfully, Warren Glover |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Instead of posting the entire page, why not post a link to the pages here? After all, that's why this website was created: to serve as an archive for articles on frequently-discussed topics. The easiest way to respond to someone who's repeating an old chestnut is to give a one-paragraph response and then point them at the relevant article. That way, you need not worry about copyright issues. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Just a minor
nitpick concerning the "Determining Distances
to Astronomical Objects" FAQ. The author gives the
surface temperature of the Sun in Kelvin, Celsius and
Fahrenheit. The Celsius temperature is wrong; it should be
5550 degrees to agree with the Kelvin and Fahrenheit
values. (Or it could be right and the other two wrong.)
Otherwise, it's a very nice and educational rebuttal to the would-be creationist cosmologists. Ian |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thanks very
much for spotting this. It is now fixed. The extract now
reads:
|
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I am a
"popular science" speaker in Illinois, and I have the
opportunity to speak to about 1500 students a year. One
young man recently spent a half hour "quizzing" me on the
"false" claims of science concerning geology, evolution,
etc. He rattled off questions from memory, and after 30
minutes of this (I'm fairly patient!), I decided he must
have memorized webpages from "Answers in Genesis". His
mother then appeared, announced she would direct me to a
website that would change MY answers. Before she could say
more, I said "AInG?", and she looked nonplussed, gathered
her child and left. Ten years old, and he already has been
thoroughly indoctrinated...a discouraging thought.
...And a related comment: the "rationale" behind the "8 inches/8,000 year average soil depth/age" argument is a "good" example of bad thought processes (and rather typical of creationist "thinking"). Even ignoring the fact that an 8,000 year old soil sits on billions of years of prior happenings, an "average" age of 8,000 years is a guarantee that some soils are much older! (If you have a 77-year old man, and three 1-year old babies, the oldest person in the room is 20?) One does not need any knowledge of soils or geology to see how silly this statement is! (and, yes, I know you knew this already, but the new "index to creationist claims" doesn't mention the "misuse" (or ignorance) of "average" in this claim, and I couldn't resist adding my two cents...) Bob Vaiden :) |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Martin Traft |
Comment: | I often hear
of the alleged prophecies of the Bible. It is said that
there are more fullfilled prophecies in the Bible than in
any other religious scripture - and this is supposedly
proof that the Bible is accurate.
I was wondering if you have any knowledge as to what extent non-Christians (or at least people who don't necessarily believe in the Bible as literal) have looked into these prophecies and their accuracy, or if you had considered showing a few examples of prophecies on the website, and where the logic of literalist interpretation falters. Thank you for a great site. /Martin |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Believe it
or not, this site is not really concerned with disproving
(or proving) Biblical prophecies.
Critiques of Biblical prophecies can be found by searching The Secular Web for the term "prophecies." Support for Biblical prophecies can be found at many sites, including Prophecy Central. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have
always accepted evolution since my childhood. I begin to
question it now. I must commend you on your very thorough
web page! I am on the God side of the origin question!!
The problem I have with evolution are: I don't like the fruits of it... It reduces life to a mechanistic construct which has no higher purpose. This does not correspond to my feelings about the meaning of life. The scientific-creationism paradigm ultimate fruit is despair IMO. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | I think
that, like many, you may have misunderstood what the theory
of evolution says. Like other scientific theories, it is a
model to explain our observations about the world around
us. It is a description of the natural laws operating in
our universe. But it makes no moral judgments. It tells us
nothing about how we should live our lives, any more than
gravitational theory, in describing the motion of a body
falling from a height, tells us we should or shouldn't jump
from cliffs.
Nor does evolution rule out the existence of a creator God. Indeed, many of those who study evolution do so because they wish to know more about the universe God created and the rules He set up governing it. You should read our articles on Evolution and Philosophy and God and Evolution. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | "The
Talk.Origins Archive is a collection of articles and essays
that explore the creationism/evolution controversy from a
mainstream scientific perspective."
I did not see a collection of articles on creationism. I think someone is trying to hide something not giving equal ground to each line of thought. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | I assume you
mean to say that you saw no articles written in support of
creationism (given that the whole Archive is nothing but
articles "on creationism"), and you wouldn't since as the
welcoming description of the Archive (which you quote
above) says, the articles found herein are written "from a
mainstream scientific perspective."
Creationism ("creation science" and/or intelligent design creationism) are not in the scientific mainstream (they're not even in a scientific tributary), hence they are not included here. Now before you go off half-cocked about how we're trying to hide something please note that the articles in the Archive are thoroughly reference and hyperlinked to antievolutionist literature, and that we have an extensive links page, here, from which interested surfers can access innumerable articles written from an antievolution perspective. While you're surfing through the antievolution pages check to see how many (or how few) return the favor of linking back to the Talk Origins Archive or similar pro-mainstream sites. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Candy Blumir |
Comment: | You made a comment on your website, that said you want to remain totally scientific, and that you did not believe in a world wide catastrophic flood. I just wanted to correct you, this way you may remain scientific. The evidence found in various parts of the world, clearly supports a catastrophic flood. As, the existence of millions of mammoths in regions of Siberia, who were frozen in ice almost perfectly and many still had food on their tongues, clearly shows that there had to be an amazing rush of water, almost instantly, and then immediate freezing afterwards. Then there are sea-shells found at the tops of mountains, which couldn't have gotten there without a great amount of water, and a number of other things that point to a massive flood that happened in the past. I hope this gives you some information, this way you can live up to your claim of being scientifically accurate. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | We have two FAQs on mammoths, and
another relevant FAQ on Atlantis, Mammoths, and
Crustal Shift (see the section The Mammoth Myths
of MOM). These FAQS can help you get a more accurate
picture of the evidence.
However, I am going to respond to your comments on mammoths by quoting a rather surprising source of information.
Now for the big surprise. The source I am quoting is the major young earth creationist organization Answers in Genesis. You can read their full article at Mammoth — Riddle of the Ice Age. Basically, their model (which is also in conflict with the evidence, by the way) is that mammoths were frozen about 4000 years ago, and about 700 years after the flood. As for sea shells, we had another feedback making the same mistake about shells this month. You should read the response to that feedback as well. In brief, floods don't leave large deposits on the tops of mountains, but in valleys. Furthermore, the details of deposited shells often shows that they were fossilized in place in a shallow marine environment; not as debris from a violent flood. This was first recognized nearly five hundred years ago by the great renaissance scholar Leonardo da Vinci. This is the essence of the scientific method; you need to actually look carefully at the evidence in detail, to test if the form of evidence is consistent with your model or not. What the evidence shows is mountains that are built up over long periods of time from sediments initially laid down in an ancient sea bed. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Rinzai Tanaka |
Comment: | Much love to
all the individuals who donate of themselves and make this
archive possible.
To say I have 'learned' here would be an understatement! I was a 100% 'Bible/creation' believer because I was taught that by people I looked up too, admired, and respected. Hindsight is 20/20, I look back now and see I was ignorant. Not because I believed Biblical creation, I was ignorant of the evidence. One Sunday I found talkorigins.org and my browser was parked here for a month! My mind flooded open, it really was 'satorical'. I HAD BEEN LIED TO!!! It was a very tough time! But facts are facts. What really 'jacked' me up was when I tried to share these things with my 'brothers' at church. They would not REALLY look at it. I would print things to make it easy, typical response: "You'll NEVER change me, so why bother" I was dumbfounded! To me this was paramount! Could I trust what I was being told by those I respected and looked up to. The answer was no. "...proof of a global flood..." "...missing link..." "...2nd law..." They lied to me! But the real slap in the face, NONE of them ever did look at the things that had obviously changed my life. I found this while reading a critique of Bob Lazar, I think it shows science is science regardless of the field! Thanks again to all! Rinzai Gogen Tanaka "I want to take some time here to talk about scientific progress, because there is one common objection to my critique of Lazar’s scenario. People will often say “Modern science could be wrong. Newton was wrong! Lazar could be right!” Yes. That is correct. In fact, modern science almost certainly IS “wrong.” But the only real test of a theory in science is that it works. Newton’s Laws worked. They still do in most situations. Einstein’s theories are better – they are more accurate and they work in more situations. New theories will continue to come along that are more precise and more generally applicable than the older theories, and these new theories will be tested by experiments until they supplant the old ones. That is how science has progressed for the past 400 years. So it is not enough to SAY that modern science is wrong. You have to demonstrate that you have something that is better. And that “better” theory needs to do everything that the old theory does, and then do more. And chances are that it won’t completely turn the old theory on it’s head – because we already know that the old theories work too well. It is not possible to create a new theory until you understand the old one well enough to present a coherent alternative. Calling current science “total nonsense” is nice rhetoric, and no doubt convincing to many non-scientists who feel alienated from science and look on scientists as a kind of modern priesthood of arcane knowledge. But science is a process – not a body of knowledge." -Dr. David L. Morgan Lazar Critique |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Hi, I'm a
newcomer to Talk-Origins and find it quite interesting. For
years I've been a devout Darwinist; E.O Wilson, Lionel
Tiger, Robin Fox, and Dawkins were my heroes. The
philosophical and social implications of the Selfish Gene
have been a big part of my understanding of family
relations and how I analyze and decipher present day
society. I must confess that I'm gradually backsliding to a
more Intelligent-Design point of view. This is based on a
couple of things: a lack of effective, logical rebuttals
and the sense of overweening arrogance on the part of the
evolutionist community.
For example, I perused the entry on Speciation in the Talk-Origins Faq. I then read the rebuttal by Richard Milton at Alternative-Science.com. He goes point by point and shows that the claimed speciations are essentially frivolous. Granted, the Faq speciation entry is several years old, but there's no excuse. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to understand that one clear dramatic irrefutable example of speciation would put lots of the creationist crowd out of business. So why aren't there any? I'm not claiming that Milton's right, merely that the Faq is not compelling and needs some sprucing up. I read with great interest the email debate with Milton regarding the hominid fossil record. Despite the shouts of glee over Milton's apparent rout at the end of the debate, I found nothing compelling about the talk-origins case. Much of the debate was drawn into a fistfight about brain size. The larger brain size was used to justify the belief that the fossils are not apes but rather transition forms to early humans. This roused my curiousity and I did an internet search on relative brain sizes of dogs. Chihuahas have 1% the body mass and 40% the brain size of the largest dogs. Granted that the brain/body ratio for chihuahas is extreme and may partly explain why they are fully functioning dogs despite their much reduced brain size. However, it points out that a 60% difference in brain size can be effected within a species, simply by breeding. I also read that micrephalic (bird brained) dwarfs with brain sizes below 700 cc are able to learn language and function in a semi-human fashion, certainly far better than any known ape. For these reasons I agree with Milton that brain size is irrelevant. Milton also makes the point that Lucy might have difficulty being bipedal due to feet which are both longer and more curved than a Chimpanzee's. No rebuttal was made of this point. I think it's a specially cogent point because true bipedality implies that it is the preferred mode of locomotion. Last time I checked, long curved feet were the last thing you'd want for walking. It leads to fallen arches. I've found the writing of many Darwinists to be full of ad-hominem arguments, flippant comments and contemptuous statements. It is generally agreed that an ad-hominem argument is the first sign of a weak case. Flippancy and contempt have little place in true scientific discussion, because they raise negative emotions that cloud the issues. Contrast this with the William Dembski of Intelligent Designs. Whatever one thinks of his theories, Dembski's style is unusually civil. He even compliments some his most ferocious critics and espresses respect for their views. I have yet to read a Darwinist who exhibits even a small amount of the civility and respect that Dembski extends to his critics. Dembski makes some extremely cogent observations about the tone of the debate in some of his papers. [...] |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: | You say,
essentially, that you find creationism more convincing
because we have not presented refutations of every last
argument against evolution. I have spent much of the last
few years collecting and presenting such refutations. So
far, I have refutations for only about 500 creationist arguments. I
apologize that I have not yet covered all of the claims
that you are interested in.
But what about your part? Have you yourself researched these subjects in depth? Are you going to conclude that a point is unanswerable just because you didn't find the answer here? I am flattered that you regard us as a fount of all knowledge, but we are not. Sometimes you will have to look further. For the matters you mention, I recommend professional paleoanthropology journals. In the case of speciation, you can find further references under CB910: No new species. There is still more evidence in the biological literature; don't forget to look there. Curved feet are an adaptation for arboreal life. Arboreality is compatible with bipedalism. Furthermore, the Fossil Hominid pages give more positive evidence for bipedalism. Your discussion of brain sizes shows no understanding of statistics, and in particular of measurements of variation. Until you understand how two populations can overlap on some measurement and still be vastly different, you will not find the argument compelling. But another point one should always consider is that a person's not finding an argument compelling does not mean that argument is wrong, even the the person is you. The ability to evaluate the quality of arguments is a useful skill which is unfortunately rarely taught. You note that contempuous statements are one consideration. But they are a very minor consideration. Contemptuous statements usually show only that a person perceives that he has been treated rudely to begin with. It is much more important to consider motives. (Creationists have an overt motivation to present arguments that support creationism; scientists have motivation to present accurate data and theories that fit it, regardless of whether it supports or contradicts creationism.) And be sure to consider all the evidence. This requires searching it out and making sure you understand it. |
From: | |
Response: |
Pardon me, but I have to demur concerning the notion that William Dembski should be the poster boy for civil discourse. The reader has apparently overlooked the juicy bits, like:
Quoted from Intelligent Design Coming Clean by William A. Dembski. This isn't the only place where Dembski has had a lapse in civility. Nor are other ID advocates reticent about letting people know how they feel about their critics. Check out the thread on invidious comparisons used by ID advocates. There is plenty of incivility in the arguments over "intelligent design". But I disagree that there is a large disparity in how that uncivil behavior is distributed. The reader may wish to see another response I have this month concerning reasons why no punches should be pulled in dealing with foes of good science education. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Thank you
for a very informative web site.
I have two questions: If we really evolved from apes, where are all these ape/humans? There are still apes and still humans. Why nothing inbetween? Where can I find the answer to that question? Can I buy the information contained in your excellent site in book-form? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | This is a
common question, and the resolution is in seeing that
living creatures are related by common ancestors in the
past, not by a sequence of forms all living in the present.
That is, there is nothing between us and other living apes for the same reason there is nothing between you and your cousin. Chimpanzees are our closest living relatives. Sadly, we did lose a closer relative about 30,000 years ago; the Neandertals; but they are not between us and chimpanzees either. They were like our sisters; where chimpanzees are like our cousins. Our sister species is now extinct; they died too young. Your sister is more closely related to you; but no closer to your cousin. In the same way, if Neandertal humans were still living today, they would not be any closer to chimpanzees than we are. This is confirmed by genetic studies using mitochondrial DNA. The genetic distance between modern humans and Neandertal humans is fairly small, but still enough to place Neandertals outside the range of current human diversity. The genetic distance from us to chimpanzees is substantially larger. And the genetic distance from Neaderthals to chimpanzees is almost exactly the same as the distance from us to chimpanzees. The creatures actually between us and chimpanzees are our respective (extinct) ancestors, back to our common ancestor, probably about 5 or 6 million years ago. In the same same way, what is really between you and your cousin is your parents and their parents (your Uncle) and then your common grandparents. An example of an ancestral species for humanity almost certainly includes some of the gracile Australopithecines. Australopithecines have long since died out and been replaced by other species in the Homo genus. We don't have any fossil evidence for comparable chimpanzee ancestors. Chimpanzees do not have a good fossil record. But again, the links are to be found in the past. And finally, no, we don't have the archive available in book form. We do have a version of the Fossil hominids FAQ in pdf, which you are welcome to print out. It is a bit out of date with the html versions, but the basic details remain the same. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I guess I am ignorant and/or stupid. I don't care how I got here. The fact that I am here is good enough for me. However, I would like to share what a college biology teacher told his classes before he started his lectures on evolution. He said, "I don't care whether you believe what you hear. I just expect you to understand the subject." I know this approach doesn't advance scientific knowledge, but it seemed like a logical way to start a series of lectures on a subject some might not agree with. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
My introductory biology professor at college said much the same thing. I think it is a good way to approach teaching the topic. It is amazing how many people who are active in antievolution have almost no understanding of the topic they try to critique. Wesley |