Browse Search Feedback Other Links Home Home

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

Feedback for October 1997

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From: Chris Stassen
Author of: Isochron Dating
Response: Your feedback was entered from the Introduction to Evolutionary Biology FAQ. That particular FAQ does not concern itself with the origin of life, but other files on this site do. (For example, the Probability of Abiogenesis (interim) FAQ and the abiogenesis book recommendations section of the Reading List FAQ.)

As a way of "giving the creationists some comments," we have an extensive collection of links to anti-evolution web sites. The total volume of creationist material available from our links page is far greater than the total size of this site. The creationists have complete control over the size and content of their own sites, so they can't complain about being censored or limited. (If you are truly concerned about the presentation of opposing views, I recommend that you follow those links and count how many of the creationist sites are unwilling to include links back to this one.)

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From: Jim Foley
Author of: Kow Swamp: is it Homo erectus?
Response: It is true that some of the fossil Australians found were extraordinarily robust, while others are not. Scientists are arguing about whether this is evidence of multiple emigrations of different populations into Australia, or whether there was just one unusually diverse population. As far as I know, there are no fossil Australians that would not be placed in Homo sapiens sapiens (and there are certainly none that are Homo erectus). There is no problem with Homo sapiens sapiens having been around 70,000 years ago, older specimens are known from elsewhere. At that time all humans were either Neandertals or Homo sapiens sapiens, although some of the sapiens fossils were still slightly more primitive than living humans.

Glad you liked the pages.

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: Creationism is not a scientific model. It makes no predictions about what will be found in the fossil record, has no mechanisms or processes that can be investigated, and is contradicted by the evidence available from nearly two centuries of biological research, which has made no change to the overall claims made by creationists.

Evolutionary theory is quite different. Like any scientific theory it gets revised in the light of evidence. It has one major mechanism (natural selection) which has been repeatedly observed, and a number of (more or less) minor mechanisms that have as well.

It makes several predictions about the sequences of ancestors, the sorts of adaptations that can, and can't, be encountered, and in every relevant way is the very paradigm of a scientific theory.

Simply because an event is historical (happened in the remote past) does not make it impervious to investigation, nor are all speculations about the past of equal worth. Hypotheses about past events are based on and tested by the preserved evidence, physical properties of observable situations that are in the appropriate ways similar, and the consonance of many well-tested reconstructions. This is science. Creationism is not even in the same business.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: It is difficult to respond to vague criticisms. If you believe that some of the files on our webside take quotes out of context, specify exactly what files you mean and exactly what quotes are misused. We do the best we can, but of course it is possible that some egregious errors have found their way into the rather large collection of essays stored here. If you think some error needs to be fixed, just point it out.

On your second question, we attempt to include links to Creationist pages with our essays, so that readers can immediately hop to see what scientific dissenters have to say for themselves. It may seem, of course, that these sites take a biased view. But most people who work on them are in the scientific mainstream, so the mainstream view -- both the conclusions and the evidence and reasoning which underpin them -- are what we present. If you believe that some error of fact or reasoning exists in one of our files, then just say exactly what it is and give a sentence or two about why you think it is wrong.

The mainstream scientific view is the mainstream view because most of those who work in the relevant sciences accept it. If there were overwhelming data that supported some other view, that other view would probably either be mainstream now, or would supplant the current view in the future. Such changes are not unusual in science, though they don't happen overnight. This site presents the evidence and arguments for the mainstream view. Generally, it is considered a good idea to give priority to mainstream scientists over those on the fringes, whether it be forensic evidence in criminal cases, medical treatments for people who are ill, or geological data when preparing to drill for oil. Why should one act differently when the subject turns to earth history?

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Duane Gish was (I believe) the source of an unsubstantiated assertion about hypothetical proteins that suggest we are more closely related to chickens than to other mammals. When challenged on this point, he made some obscure arguments about lysozyme and lactalbumin. It turns out that human lysozyme is closer to chicken lysozyme than to human lactalbumin.

How does this show we are more closely related to a chicken? More closely than what? What other animal is being compared here?

We can compare chickens and humans with other animals, but the results are perhaps not what Dr Gish would like. For example, human and chimpanzee lysozyme are identical, whereas chicken lysozyme is substantially different, though still recognizably lysozyme.

What we are up against is evidently deliberate obfuscation on the part of Dr. Gish. The data itself matches with common descent very nicely.

You can compare lysozyme and alpha-lactalbumin proteins on the net. You can read about Dr Gish's problems with protein data in the archive[1] and [2].

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: I am not sure what you bookmarked, but here is a web site with many further links entitled Nexus for New Mexicans' Response to the Removal of Evolution from the State Content Standards with Benchmarks.

[Archive maintenance note: The site that Chris linked to no longer exists and the link goes to an the Wayback Machine copy. The organization that produced it, the Coalition for Excellence in Science and Math Education, still exists (September 2003).]

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From:
Response:

Television shows are not science. The primary goal of a television show is to attract advertising revenue for its broadcaster (with the exception of public television broadcasts). Television shows do this primarily by providing entertainment. There is little incentive for a television show to present a boring truth over an exciting falsehood.

Much of the practice of science consists of mundane routine work that makes for boring television. An exciting claim of a breakthrough discovery makes for good television; backing up that claim by providing substantial and verifiable evidence does not.

Do not confuse television with real life. Certainly do not confuse it with science.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: There is plenty of factual evidence to support evolution. It is available in Browse the Archive You have merely stated your opinions. Please be specific and tell us what there is in the above web page that is not factual. BTW, if species did not evolve, how did they come into existence, and what factual evidence is there to support this alternative explanation? Science depends on the preponderance of evidence, not the religious beliefs of the majority of persons.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: As far as anyone can tell, the "Lost Continent of Atlantis" is a myth, nothing more.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From: Tim Ikeda
Response: Perhaps you could click around and read the FAQ file on this site by John Wilkins, titled: "Evolution and Philosophy: Is Evolution Science, and What Does 'Science' Mean?" . I prefer books myself and there are a couple I'll suggest. If others have their own suggestions, try appending it to this response.

Try reading Ernst Mayr's, The growth of biological thought: Diversity, evolution, and inheritance (Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1982). An excellent book -- available in paperback -- by one of the founders and key players in the development of modern evolutionary biology. In this work, Dr. Mayr focuses on the many of the same issues you've described. Although Mayr demands some effort on the part of the reader, it is directed at laymen and scientists alike. Regardless of previous experience and exposure to evolutionary science, practically everyone comes away with a better understanding of the details, history and underlying issues of evolution.

Or if you don't have as much time, try Elliot Sober's Philosophy of biology (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1993 - Dimensions of philosophy series). This won't provide anywhere near the same background as Mayr's book (which wasn't Sober's intent), but it does cover some of the points raised.

Suggestion - Stop into a library (university or metropolitan, ideally), and check out some books. Two reasons: 1) The web is a lousy place for in-depth information, 2) It's hard to justify reinventing the wheel.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: You are largely correct, and over-all organisms evolve towards metabolic efficiency, but the likelihood is that this reached a plateau some billions of years ago. Evolution is directionless in that it does not make gross morphological changes towards any particular goal. There's nothing about hairiness that is evolutionarily more advanced than the thermal arrangements of dinosaurs (which seems to have been modified scales of some kind), for example.

A large part of Darwinian evolution is tracking the medium term fitness landscape, which is itself constituted from the interactions of evolving species in ecosystems. While one can represent it as a set of trajectories through a state space in the mode of thermodynamic physics, you will not see a simple equilibrium attractor point or simple behaviour within the space, for the obvious reason that the energy flows between organisms are incredibly complex and nonlinear. The behaviour is more like that of a connected network than an object on a stable surface.

You should look up the work of Manfred Eigen, especially his book of 1992/3. Unfortunately, I am not able to give better refs right now.

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: Creation Science and the Earth's Magnetic Field
Response: The vast majority of Christians, and the vast majority of scientists, do not believe that science and religion are incompatible; indeed, the majority of scientists (from my experience) are religious people. Therefore, this great blunder has in fact done no real damage to the scientific world at all. Chares Darwin most certainly did not convert to Christianity on his deathbed, nor did he convert to anything else. He never refuted nor recanted his own theory of evolution, and held it to the end. So much for the fairy tales.

Facts ..., More Facts ..., Additional Facts ..., & Lotta Heavy Reading ...

Get with the program.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response:

Scientists and mathematicians are only now beginning to understand how systems with simple rules can develop highly complicated behavior. Examples of this include fractals, such as the Mandelbrot and Julia sets, which exhibit exceedingly complex and unpredictable behavior but derive from simple equations. "Chaos" or "complexity" research is still a growing field, with much work to be done. Look up the Santa Fe Institute, which does research in this field. You might also want to read "The Quark and the Jaguar" by Nobel laureate Murray Gell-Mann.

The Second Law of Thermodynamics does not contradict evolution; if it did, babies could not develop from embryos. See the Second Law of Thermodynamics FAQ for more details.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Natural selection might be better called differential reproductive success. As long as there are inherited characteristics which have some impact on an individual's reproductive success, then natural selection occurs, ..uh.., naturally. In different environments, different characteristics may become more or less significant. Modern medicine has reduced the significance of some conditions; but has possibly made others more significant. By allowing sexually active adults to choose not to have children, medicine may introduce a number of new selective considerations. Judging the effect of modern medicine on natural selection is pretty speculative: but certainly the effect has not been to remove selection.

However, we should also bear in mind that natural selection probably won't bring about any sudden changes, especially with a large breeding population. Leave it a million years or so, and see what happens. I'll take a wild guess that in that time period there will be a couple of population crashes; and that the future course of human evolution will be most strongly affected by what happens at those times; but that our descendants at that time will still be recognizably human.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: Punctuated Equilibria
Response:

Darwinian evolution is that evolution which proceeds via the mechanism of natural selection. Punctuated equilibria specifies spatial and temporal patterns of change, but not the underlying mechanism of that change. I suggest reading the Punctuated Equilibria FAQ for more detailed information. PE is based upon studies of observed evolution, specifically being derived by applying Ernst Mayr's theory of peripatric speciation to the fossil record. In fact, there are many known intermediate or transitional fossil sequences. In their original essay on PE, Eldredge and Gould presented two such sequences as illustrating PE. In their 1977 paper, most of the pages are devoted to discussion of transitional sequences. PE is established on both logical and evidential grounds as an active theory.

Gould has been cited as saying that transitional sequences don't exist before. Here's what he has had to say on the topic:

"Since we proposed punctuated equilibria to explain trends, it is infuriating to be quoted again and again by creationists -- whether through design or stupidity, I do not know -- as admitting that the fossil record includes no transitional forms. Transitional forms are generally lacking at the species level, but they are abundant between larger groups."

(Stephen Jay Gould, "Evolution as Fact and Theory", in Hen's Teeth and Horse's Toes, p. 260, Norton, New York, 1980.)

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: The Second Law of Thermodynamics, Evolution, and Probability
Response: The writer is referring to talk.origins faq Thermodynamics, Evolution and Creationism (much of this material can also be found in my web page).

Creationists have always claimed, and continue to claim, that evolution violates the second law of thermodynamics, which they claim will not permit order to spontaneously arise from disorder. This argument is refuted by the fact that the growth and development of living things clearly represents an example of order spontaneously arising from disorder. The creationist response has been to arbitrarily postulate an outside mechanism which "overcomes" the second law of thermodynamics. This outside mechanism is said to exist in the case of the growth of living things, but does not apply to the evolution of living things! The claim that this outside mechanism is stated in the second law of thermodynamics is completely untrue. Although mechanisms exist for thermodynamical lo provide a mechanism to overcome basic thermodynamics laws.

The laws of thermodynamics are rigorously based on the mathematical treatment of a few fundamental axioms. I have demonstrated, quite clearly, that the mathematics of thermodynamics does not, repeat, does not, rule out order spontaneously arising from disorder. If my position in this regard is unacceptable to the above critic, then it is up to him to refute the mathematics of my presentation. He has not done so, but merely repeated unsubstantiated creationist claims.

The comment that the formation of a crystalline structure is not an example of order spontaneously arising from disorder is truly bizarre. Ions or molecules in a crystal are clearly more ordered than those randomly moving in solution. The statement that there is an increase in entropy in the crystal when the water evaporates is completely untrue. As I repeatedly pointed out in my web page, it is the OVERALL entropy that must increase. The entropy of the crystal decreases upon formation, and the entropy of the water increases upon evaporation. The entropy increase of the water is greater than the entropy DECREASE of the crystal, so the OVERALL NET ENTROPY increases.

The terms "reversible" and "irreversible" are clearly and specifically defined in any legitimate textbook of thermodynamics. A reversible process is one in which the tendency to go forward is exactly balanced by the tendency to go backwards. In other words, it is characterized by a state of rest. An infinitesimal change one way or the other will make the process either go forward or go in the reverse direction. The time required to do so will approach infinity. Reversible processes are not real, but are used as a mathematical tool to develop specific mathematical relationships in thermodynamics. Any real process is irreversible. As I pointed out, the term "irreversible" does not, repeat, does not necessarily mean that the process can not be reversed by one means or another. It merely means that the reaction will not spontaneously reverse itself.

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Of course people have a right to think what they want. They do not, however, have the right to be correct. Sorting out which views correspond to reality can be a hard process; which usually requires stepping outside one's personal experience to examine and test the available evidence.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: Is the Planet Venus Young?
Response: That is extremely unlikely. The best way to see this is to consult one of the papers I referenced, namely On the thermal evolution of Venus, by Jafar Arkani-Hamed, Journal of Geophysical Research (Planets), vol. 99, no. E1, pages 2019-2033, January 25, 1994. In particular, see figure 4 (page 2027), and the text begining on page 2025 under the heading "Core solidification". The core cannot solidify until it is cool enough, and that takes at least 2 billion years. Then, depending on the model you use for convection in the mantle, and the mantle temperature profile, the core takes from 500 million to a couple of billion years to solidify. But Venus, like Mars, has no global magnetic field. This means that the core is now either entirely solid, or entirely fluid, assuming that the magnetic field dynamo is powered by the latent heat of fusion as the core solidifies. The planet surface is much too cool to support the idea that the core remains entirely fluid, so it must now be entirely solid. Hence, Venus must be old enough for the core to have gone entirely solid, and that takes billions of years no matter how you try to figure it.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response: Whenever creationists make some wild claim (e.g, "Darwin recanted evolution on his deathbed", "the Leakeys admitted they lied", "Donald Johanson admitted to finding Lucy's knee bone two miles away from the rest of her skeleton") the best response is to challenge them for documentation. It is the burden of the person making the outrageous claim to defend it; it is not your responsibility to find refutations to a claim that was most likely fabricated.
Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response:

I don't know that evolution debunks the idea that Man is created in God's image. Most mainline Christians understand this to mean not that God has two arms and legs and a head, but that humans have some spark of divine spirit or soul or sentience or intellect given to them by God. To that extent, the origin of Man's physical body is essentially irrelevant, at least as far as it concerns their relationship to God.

Indeed, one can view Man's relation to primates and all terrestrial life as confirmation that we are part of God's creation.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Responses
From:
Response:

(Please excuse me; I took the liberty of HTMLizing your feedback.)

I'm glad that Dr. Gould enjoyed the material you gave him. I doubt that Dr. Gould reads talk.origins, as he is a busy man, but he might find it a useful place to point others to.

Dr. Gould's point is well-taken; no one likes to have their name misspelled. I did a search of the Talk.Origins Archive for Steven and Gould. The only misspelling of Dr. Gould's name that I could find on the Talk.Origins Archive site (except in the feedback) was in the Archaeopteryx Challenge FAQ. I will request that the author correct this immediately.

From:
Author of: Punctuated Equilibria
Response:

As the author of the Jargon File entry mentioned, a cold chill ran through me at the thought that I might be among the offenders who misspelled SJ Gould's name. A quick check showed that this was not so. Phew.

My experience with SciCre-ists using the "Gould is a Marxist" fallacy in setting aside his comments dates back considerably further than April 1997. In 1991, Mike Posey on the StarText online service forwarded it, and in 1992 Mike Huben used it on talk.origins.

Wesley R. Elsberry

Feedback Letter
Comment:
Response
From:
Response:

Most Christians resolve this by realizing that the "death" the Bible is talking about is not the physical death of the body, but the death of the soul due to sin. After all, Christ's death and resurrection didn't stop people from dying; he died for your soul, not for your body.

With this understanding, there is no incompatibility between evolution and the Bible on this point. (Actually, the assertion that death has existed for billions of years has less to do with evolution than with geology and astrophysics.)

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Response:

From the Talk.Origins Archive home page:

This archive is a collection of articles and essays, most of which have appeared in talk.origins at one time or another. The primary reason for this archive's existence is to provide mainstream scientific responses to the many frequently asked questions (FAQs) and frequently rebutted assertions that appear in talk.origins.

As such, it is the philosophy of the Talk.Origins Archive that the best people to make the creationist argument are creationists, especially considering that there are many "flavors" of creationism. The Talk.Origins Archive does provide, however, a large list of links to creationist web sites. The list can be found at Other Links.

Feedback Letter
From:
Comment:
Response
From:
Author of: The Second Law of Thermodynamics, Evolution, and Probability
Response: I can't speak for the organization as a whole, but I am sure there would no objection. As a general reference I would suggest that you link to the main t.o. page and pursue whatever aspect of the controversy that interests you.
Previous
September 1997
Up
1997 Feedback
Next
November 1997
Home Browse Search Feedback Other Links

Home Page | Browse | Search | Feedback | Links