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

Feedback for October 1998

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: This is a long response, and the feedback page isn't really the place to respond to it. However, I would like to make a few points.

1. Falsification is not to be rejected as a result of the paradox that it is not falsified (actually, that is a claim of self-defeat). What is to be rejected is the notion that only the claim, not actually made by Popper I think, that if it isn't falsifiable it has no place in science. Since the claim itself is not falsifiable, then it has no place in science, and so if science depends for its scientific nature on a nonscientific principle, there are problems if that principle excludes itself.

2. There are all sorts of assumptions in science. It's just that none of them are absolutely necessary. Moreover, none of them require faith, although they may involve acts of faith on the parts of some individuals.

3. Your distinction between facts, hypotheses and theories is too stark. It is my view that they grade into each other and that some theories - for relevant example, natural selection - have been observed and manipulated so often they are now facts. Ian Hacking once wrote of electrons (theoretical entities if ever there were any at their birth) that if you can spray them, they are real. Are you saying that it is not a fact that electrons exist even though they were initially proposed as entities in a theoretical model?

4. Proof is definitely not possible, but we can demonstrate the validity of a model to our scientific satisfaction. This can never be done in the face of rigid ideological opposition, for ideology is impervious to refutation.

5. Theories do not always get replaced by other, better, theories, but it is a general tendency. Only Kuhn made it a necessary sequence.

6. The point of the first two chapters of Genesis is best found, in my opinion, in comparing it to etiological myths of its time. The contrast shows that the Israelites who wrote it had a peculiar and unique notion of God, one who they could best compare to the Great Kings of the Hittites, and who had no equals. I agree that the point of Gen 1 is that creation is ex nihilo, but mainly the reason is that the authors wanted to show that the world is distinct from divine nature and not made from it. It is a brilliant piece of theological expression. It sucks as a scientific account, but I promise not to take my theology from science if Christians promise not to take their science from the Bible of subsequent theological authorities.

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Response: The reader's suggestion is noted; however, the Archive will remain named as it is. It is an archive of posts to talk.origins, and it does explore the evolution/creation controversy. Therefore, it is accurately named.

Sarcasm aside, the Archive's primary purpose is not to "disprove creationism any way we can," but to present accurately the views of mainstream science in order to clear up public misperceptions and misconceptions of that science. What we have tried to do is to distill as best we can the results that can be found in the books and journal articles referenced in the FAQs. Disproving creationism is important to us only to the extent that it contradicts scientific discovery.

Finally, evolutionary biology is not a religion. It is science, science which has been observed both directly and indirectly.

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Response: As is clearly stated on the welcome message, the Talk.Origins Archive presents the views of mainstream science, which includes, among other things, evolution and an old Earth. Creationism is thoroughly represented elsewhere on the Web. See our list of other links for some of those sites.

A theory must advance some testable, falsifiable predictions. The theory of evolution by natural selection does so. Evolutionary scientists do not set out to "disprove creationism", they go about their business of substantiating evolution. Creationists, however, clearly "bring the fight" to evolutionists, who naturally rise to the challenge.

It may be equally claimed that creationism attempts discredit evolution any way it can. Creationism may be more aptly named "Evolution Refutation". Since Creationists have lost every legal battle to put their own (religious) explanation of origins in public school classrooms, the only other option left to them is to attempt to disprove evolution. What means do they use? Any and all, not for the purposes of concrete falsification, but for the purposes of causing doubt and confusion in the general public.

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Response: Jeffery,

As you'll no doubt admit, that is quite a list...

But I like a challenge. And I was in fact recently challenged to answer all the questions on the CSC (Center for Scientific Creationism) website, which are very similar to the ones you wrote.

It is a work in progress (it will take several weeks to do), and you may view it as it evolves. There are admittedly many more qualified people to answer these questions, but I know they are busy with REAL work relating to evolution and science, and shouldn't be bothered with stuff like this.

I've got the time.

To veiw the work, go to my evolution site and scroll down the page.

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Response: Jeffery,

I have definately decided to answer the questions you posed. The 20 (really 50) from the CSC website took much less time than I anticipated.

I will email you personally when I have completed the task, and anyone else can check on my evolution site to see if it is up and finished.

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Response: As far as the bombardier beetle is concerned, you might find this FAQ interesting.

However, nearly every major creationist, including Hovind, now recognize that the old claim that hydrogen peroxide and hydroquinone (the two chemicals in question) are explosive when mixed is simply wrong. You can even test that yourself. You can get a solution of hydrogen peroxide from any drug store and hydroquinone from a photo lab. Pour the quinone into a glass, add the peroxide and watch what happens. I guarantee you that the most that will happen is the that the quinone will turn brown.

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Response: The index is available through both "Browse the Archive" and "Search the Archive," but the reader's point is well-taken. I'll ask Brett to put a link to the Index on the home page of the Archive.
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Response: The Theory of Evolution does not speak to the issue of whether life does or does not have a designer. It is not within the means of science to suggest such answers.

The idea that chance is the engine of evolution is a misunderstanding. Chance is only one factor involved in evolution. Non-random natural selection another.

1) Just because something happened a long time ago, and no one witnessed it, does not mean that we cannot get a clear picture of what happened and how. As a simple analogy, a man can commit a murder, with no one watching him, and he can still be executed for the crime. Forensic science can reconstruct what happened with a high degree of certainty using the evidence that is gathered from the scene. We learn how evolution happened in the same way.

2) Speciation, or the emergence of a new species, takes many generations to happen. In most cases, the lifespan of species, especially large animals, is too long for us to observe changes directly. For very short-lived species such as insects, the emergence of new species has indeed been observed. As far as your face speculation, it is not framed quite clearly enough for me to offer a proper response. Animals do not have one eye or three because the capacity for such does not exist in the gene pool, and if such a feature arose through a random mutation, it is doubtful that such a trait would provide a survival advantange, and therefore would not be passed to the next generation.

3) The fitness of a species is simply the ability of the individuals of the species to efficiently make use of the resources of its environment. This has nothing to do with the species "evolving to another species". If the environment changes, or if the species relocates to a new environment, or a new species enters the area and competes, evolution will probably occur- or the species may become extinct.

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Response: First of all, it should be pointed out that the main purpose of most of these creationist speakers is to "preach to the choir"; they are saying what the majority in the audience already believe and want to hear. The last thing they want to do is disturb that complacency by engaging in a rational debate.

Their second major purpose is to confuse people like yourself, people who know enough about science and evolution to know that most of what passes for "scientific creationism" is pure bunk, but who don't know enough about all the detailed evidence to understand why the creationist is wrong. As such, occasionally you hear something that sounds plausible, but you don't know how to refute it, so you begin to wonder if it might be true. I understand completely, because I used to be like you. So take it from an old campaigner: 90% or more of what these showman creationists say has been thoroughly refuted nine ways from Sunday for years. Just because you may not know the answer does not mean that no one else has been able to figure it out by now.

Now, as to your specific questions. Mats Molen is wrong about his description about how scientists "reconstruct" fossil species. First of all, no species is "speculation" if it leaves hard physical evidence -- bones or teeth -- of its existence. All we may have of a species is teeth or a few key bones, but all we need to do is show that these teeth or bones are sufficiently different from any known species, alive oe extinct, to prove that they belong to a new species.

Secondly, his description of how scientists "reconstruct" a species from a few bones is overly simplistic. If all you have is a jaw bone, say a mandible, you cannot reconstruct the species' appeareance in life. However, you can say whether the species was fish, amphibian, reptile, bird or mammal; you can say whether it was a carnivore or a herbivore; you can approximate how large it was; you can make informed speculation about what its generally anatomy and lifestyle was like. You can in fact say alot about that species; you just couldn't paint its portrait.

Thirdly, a mandible would in fact prove evolution, if that species was transitional between two others and if one the features that evolved were the jaw bones. If the mandible possessed features that only the ancestral species had, possessed features that only the descendent species had, possessed features that both the ancestral and descendent species had and possessed features that neither the ancestral nor the descendent species had, then it would in fact be very strong proof of the fact of evolution.

You know, what's interesting about all this is that these very things that Mr. Molen says science cannot do are exactly what the science of comparative anatomy says is natural to do. By the way, a creationist first invented comparative anatomy; his name was Baron Georges Cuvier and he is also the father of vertabrate paleontology.

Yes, there are gaps in the fossil record, but there are also enough transitional fossils filling these gaps for us to still get a good idea of how major kinds evolved. We don't need to have a continuous series, just enough to show the major morphological changes. However, there are other fossils series that are very nearly continuous, especially those series which show how various species evolved from a single parental species.

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Response: The reader's critique is a sound one, and it is one made in several places on this Archive. Try the following links as a sampler:
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Response: This site is indeed the premier site of its kind (imo). Glad you were able to access what you needed for your debate and use it. I also frequently use a faq or type in a keyword on the search page, and the pertinent information appears, and the defeat of my creationist opponent is only a few keystrokes away. That, I think, is one of the major purposes of the talk.origins archive- to provide a resource that enables the non-scientist access to the latest, most accurate information, giving the ability to hold their own against even the most seasoned creationist debater.
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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: The problem with raising ethics in relation to evolution is that evolutionary science, along with all other science, is ethically uninformative. While I am aware that some seem to think that everything must relate to moral matters, and in some ways everything does, it is not a flaw in evolutionary science that it has no overt moral flavor. Neither does, for example, the science involved in making your computer, or running the telecommunications network by which you made your comment.

Attempts have been famously made to draw moral conclusions from evolution. One of these is the so-called "social Darwinism" movement, and another is the eugenics movement (the latter is far more closely connected to Darwinism than the social stance that misuses its name). However, the main objection to this was stated first by David Hume in the 18th century - no description of actual states of affairs, past or present, can tell you what ought to be done. If the fittest survive in biology, is that a claim that only the fit should survive in society? Not without a whole series of ancillary assumptions, none of which are purely factual claims.

To play that game, and make evolution a moral, not a theoretical and scientific, issue is to give the game away from the beginning. While I respect those who wish to discuss the moral implications (for them) of evolution (an example is Howard Bloom's The Lucifer Principle, which reprises Hobbes' pessimism about humanity), there is no rigid chain of argument from it to them.

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Response: If you go back and check, nothing on this website excludes the possibility of a creator. There are many evolutionists to whom their Christian faith is very important. The only "gigantic problem that is plaguing" them is a dogmatic adherence to a strictly literal interpretation of the Judeo-Christian bible.

This is a website about science. Science, for it to remain science, cannot embrace "absolute infallability", does not pretend to have "unerring accuracy" and cannot recognize the stamp of "divine authenticity".

Science is a search for truth that does not assume its own infallability. It is self-correcting, and as new data is obtained through improved observations and technology, our model of how things work is drawn into sharper focus.

Science is fully capable of answering how, who, when, and where, but you are fully entitled to reserve the question of why for your religion.

You might read the God and Evolution FAQ

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Response: Evolution is both a fact and a theory. (Actually, a large set of facts and a number of theories which explain them.) See the Evolution is a Fact and a Theory FAQ.

The formation of so-called "polystrate" fossils was understood by geologists over a century ago. They present no mystery to geologists. See the Polystrate Fossils FAQs.

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Response: Hi Rebecca,

I just wanted to provide an easily understandable explanation of how a theory can be a fact.

Here is the definition of theory from the National Academy of Science:

"Scientific theories are explanations of natural phenomena built up logically from testable observations and hypotheses."

Read that sentence carefully, and then ask yourself "What part of that definition excludes a theory from being a fact?" Look at the definition again...

It's true that not every theory withstands the test of time and goes on to be considered a fact by nearly all of the scientific community, but evolution is one that has. More from the NAS- they say that evolution is "something that has been tested or observed so many times that there is no longer a compelling reason to keep testing or looking for examples. The occurrence of evolution in this sense is a fact. Scientists no longer question whether descent with modification occurred because the evidence supporting the idea is so strong."

The evidence is presented all throughout this website. Granted, it takes a great deal of time to sift through it all, but that is a matter of motivation.

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From: Chris Stassen
Author of: Isochron Dating
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The response is easy: your claim that "all five" of your alleged requirements must have arrived at the same time is false. Had you bothered to perform even a tiny bit of research into the lifeforms that can be observed today, you would have known that there are many creatures which survive just fine despite meeting only a subset of your requirements. I'd recommend you obtain J.T. Bonner's The Evolution of Complexity (1988, Princeton University Press, ISBN 0-691-08494-7) and come back once you have read it.

In nature today we can observe:

  • Single-celled creatures that live in colonies (e.g., some kinds of cyanobacteria). These meet only one of your five alleged requirements (and that one only weakly).
  • Colonies of single-celled creatures with a very simple division of labor between only two cell types (e.g., spore-forming bacteria, and other kinds of cyanobacteria). These meet one of your alleged requirements strongly and two others weakly, and not the other two.
  • Simple organisms with up to four cell types (e.g., Volvox and Ulva). These meet two of your requirements strongly, two more weakly, but not the fifth. The sea lettuce (Ulva) may reach the size of a hand.
  • More complicated organisms with perhaps seven cell types (e.g., mushrooms, giant kelp and some other seaweeds). These satisfy four of your five requirements but not the fifth.

Note that I am not presenting these examples as a single evolutionary lineage. I am using them to illustrate that your five alleged requirements do not all need to appear at the same time, and in fact some of the individual requirements may be only partially fulfilled in definitely viable creatures.

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Response: It is heartening to know that people find this site to be useful not only as a resource in the creation/evolution issue, but as a general evolutionary science resource. The creation/evolution issue is largely a political issue. Young-Earth global-flood creationists rarely push their case in scientific circles. They are infinitely more likely to be found agitating school boards and state legislatures. It is good to know that the scientific usefulness of this site nonetheless remains high.
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Response: Hi,

The maintainers of this website appreciate you comments.

Well said statements. One reason that people don't get their "pseudoscientific creationist arguments exposed" is that Creationist debaters are so frequently on the aggressive, quickly positioning themselves to attack every facet of evolutionary biology. Scientists are hard-pressed to put out all the fires lit all over the place by creationists. But many of us are realizing that it's time to start disregarding their long-refuted objections, in favor of going into attack mode, and bringing the claims of creationism out into the light. I think if people knew the insurmountable problems with creation "science", they might think twice about allying themselves with it.

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Response: This is almost not an appropriate issue for this website, but since I am a darwinist who uses the "Darwin fish" on all of my vehicles, I feel fully qualified to rebut your comment.

The use of the Darwin fish goes beyond simple support of evolutionary theory. Someone who is using the Darwin fish feels that the constant, IN YOUR FACE display of Christianity, either with symbols, advertisements, legislative attempts to get the 10 commandments into courthouses and creationism into public schools, would- be missionaries testifying on our doorsteps, assertions that this is a christian nation, and so on and so forth... all of these things create an atmosphere that is both hostile and exclusionary to all non-christians.

Use of the Darwin symbol, at least for this darwinian, is not as a personal affront to Christians. It is to show that there is one more person who does not agree with them. The fish that evolved legs is an intrinsic idea to biological evolution, and at the same time serves as a visible rebuttal to Christians who feel the need to show the rest of us their Icthus fish.

I, as a darwinist, do not disrespect all Christians... only the militant, extremist Christian Coalition type who feel that their way is the only way. Some darwinists are Christians, some are not. This is not a scientific matter (and not really a talk.origins topic). It is a question of freedom to express one's opinion, and the right to dissent from the majority.

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Response: I would first take issue with the reader's statement, "Most Darwinists do not espouse a belief in a Supreme Being/Creator." That is simply untrue, as numerous polls indicate. Atheism is not in any way a requirement for acceptance of evolution. See the God and Evolution FAQ.

A completely non-scientific poll conducted some time back in talk.origins of those who displayed the "Darwin fish" emblem revealed the following:

  • Some of those who displayed the Darwin fish did so as a gentle taunting of those who feel the necessity to display their religion upon their sleeve. (Quite literally; I am thinking of the "WWJD?" paraphernalia which has become common in some areas.) No disrespect of Christianity is intended, just of those who treat Jesus as a brand name to be displayed. Consider the expulsion of the traders from the temple (Mark 11:15-16, Luke 19:45-46).
  • Others thought of the Darwin fish as a legitimate symbol in its own right. After all, the symbol of a fish with feet is referring to the lungfish, the sort of transitional form one expects to see with evolution. As such, the Darwin fish proclaims the evidence for evolution.
  • Some used it as a declaration of atheism and an overall rejection of Christianity.
  • Some used it to express both their Christian faith and their acceptance of evolution. (One respondent had an "ICHTHYS" fish on one side of his car and a "Darwin" fish on the other.)

So you see, it would be simplistic to ascribe only one motive to those who bear the symbol. The same is true of any symbol, such as the swastika, which is an ancient Hindu and Jain symbol for good luck.

By the way, there are several different stories as to how the fish became a symbol of Christianity, but that is neither here nor there.

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Author of: Duane Gish and Creationism at Rutgers: Trott Rebuts Gish
Response: Personally, I wish for every Duane Gish among young-Earth global-flood creationist leaders, there was a Kurt Wise. I suspect that the more informed and astute creationists wish the same thing.

(For those who don't know, Dr. Wise is a young-Earth global-flood creationist who is, in the opinion of most who follow the issue of creation/evolution closely, rather responsible in his treatment of facts and issues.)

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: While I haven't yet seen Dembski's book, this circularity is characteristic of many arguments from design. The very notion of "information" is an a priori and question begging specification of what is interesting about life. For example, few claims are made about life's complexity on the basis of its waste products, but why not? What is not interesting about chemical waste products that is interesting about genes, biochemical pathways in cells and so forth? The answer is that it interests us.

Information is defined in communications theory as, basically, the transmission of signals over channels. This is not the sense of information that most intelligent design theorists make use of. There is a tacit appeal to the more common sense notion - meaningful information, information about something. So, genes are "about" traits of organisms, metabolic processes are "about" survival, and so on. How did these things get here? The trick lies in assuming that "here" is where they had to get.

If they could have gone anywhere that would result in survival, and there is nothing much significant about "here" then the Darwinian explanation is just that there is no design, just survival. The intelligent design answer depends on assuming that "being here" is special, and so that Darwinian selection and drift explanations fail.

As Wesley Elsberry has argued in a recent thread ( in Deja News), Dembski's Explanatory Filter evades the "Not known" alternative and instead splits everything into "Designed" or "Not designed". This points up one major failing of design theory: it is subjective. It is a matter of what fits the criteria of the observer and his/her model. It is not something that is true just of the things that are being studied, but of the process of studying them. Of course, this is also true to some extent of panadaptationism in evolution.

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Response: Mutations can add genetic information; for example, a sequence of DNA bases can be repeated. (So AGTTCAGC could turn into AGTTCTTCTTCAGC, for instance.) They can also delete a sequence as well, or modify the bases.

I'm not sure what the reader means by a "more complex form." Evolution does not imply that goats will give birth to pigs, or something like that. Large-scale changes in populations usually take place over large periods of time. But speciation has been observed, both directly and indirectly. See the Observed Instances of Speciation FAQ and More Observed Instances of Speciation FAQ for more details.

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Response: I just wanted to add a couple of thoughts. The Theory of Evolution does not stipulate that more "complex" organisms should be produced by natural selection. Nature selects offspring that are better adapted to their particular environment. If this entails more complexity, so be it. But complexity is not a requirement-- adaptive utility and function are. It is like a game of "rock, paper scissors". Which one is best? It depends on the situation.

If a "more complex" species is uprooted and brought to a different environment, it probably wouldn't do very well. It's complexity would give it no survival advantage over the more "simple" organisms, which had evolved to adapt to that environment.

If humans can make such major changes in species like dogs, cats, livestock, flowers, cereal grains, etc., just by Artificial Selection (by selecting the individuals with favorable traits over the last few thousand years), what must nature, working through natural selection over millions of years, be capable of?

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Response: We agree with you on this point. There are multiple independent lines of evidence to indicate that the Earth is older than 6000 years. See, for example, the Icecore Dating FAQ. I thought we had a dendrochronology (tree ring dating) FAQ; evidently we don't (anyone interested in writing one?), but it is mentioned in several places throughout the Archive. For example, see Dave Matson's response to the claims of Kent Hovind, specifically claim number 27.
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Response: You are referring to Michael Behe's concept of irreducible complexity. His claim is that there are some structures or systems that are so complex that if you remove even one component the entire structure or system fails to work. Therefore, he claims, these structures or systems could not have evolved piecemeal. In point of fact this simplistic claim ignores the fact that many components of known biological structures and systems are remarkably versatile, such that the functions they perform now are not necessarily the functions they first evolved to perform. There is also a great deal of evidence that explains some or most of how systems like blood clotting or the immune system evolved.

For more information see Irreducible Complexity and Michael Behe.

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Response: As is clearly stated on the welcome message, the Talk.Origins Archive presents the views of mainstream science, which includes, among other things, evolution and an old Earth. Creationism is thoroughly represented elsewhere on the Web. See our list of other links for some of those sites.

If you know where it says that talk.origins is unbiased towards "creationism", please inform the administrator. It will be removed immediately! If you have seen that statement anywhere on talk.origins, it must be an oversight.

This website was created and is maintained by mainstream scientists, who do not have a vested interest in using evolution to maintain an ideological world view, but do have an interest in intellectual and scientific integrity.

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: Don't be a believer in evolution. Be a convinced thinker basing your views on evidence, argument, explanatoriness and likelihood.

There are no "proofs" of anything in the mathematical and logical sense, outside mathematics and logic. The case for evolutionary theories is made on masses of evidence and their ability to explain the biological facts. There are no knockdown simple arguments that are not just rhetorical devices. As Plato in the Sophist observed, the use of rhetoric to convince people of matters of public importance is dangerous and anti-rational.

Also, this is not a struggle between evolution and the doctrine of creation, or any other doctrine of the theology of any religion. It is a struggle between reasoned science and irrational literalism, primarily for the minds of our young and those that make public policy. The doctrine that God created all that is, and sustains it, is not inconsistent with the best of modern biology.

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Response: Considering the number of responses we receive that are similar to this one, I sometimes wonder if we shouldn't do this:
Please read the
Archive welcome message
before giving us feedback.

The reason to bother with such a Web site is to present the findings of mainstream science. It is an archive for the talk.origins discussion group; thus the name, Talk.Origins Archive.

You want other opinions? Fine. Go to the talk.origins newsgroup; you'll get plenty. Or check out our list of other links; you'll find more opinions than you can shake a stick at. Or read the links to creationist rebuttals that we put directly on a number of the FAQs. Or best yet, read one of the books or articles referenced in the FAQs.

We have never, ever, ever, claimed to be "impartial" or "unbiased" or "trying to present all viewpoints." We have a definite bias; it is clearly stated in numerous locations; and we give links to plenty of other viewpoints. We want people to read other viewpoints. We expect them to read other viewpoints. And we give plenty of regard to other viewpoints. Why else would we have all these FAQs? Why else would we have this very feedback? "Giving regard to" other opinions doesn't mean "agreeing with unquestioningly."

Oh, dear. I think I've been a bit harsher than I meant to be. I apologize for my tone. But do count how often this question has come up in feedback in just the past few months and you'll begin to understand my frustration. In fact, as far as I can tell, this Archive has been accused of bias at least once in every month's feedback since it began in May of 1996. The point has been made ad infinitum; let's move on, shall we?

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Response: It should be noted that Ham's ultimate target audience consists of children, who are more likely not to know any better. It is not only a libelous treatment of science and scientists; it is an attempt to poison young minds.
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Response: Try setting the default font in your browser to a bigger point size (I use 14pt for the proportional font).

In Netscape, you will find the option under the Edit->Preferences menu. Each different computer has different fonts, screen resolution, and browser software, and so what works fine on one site will not work so well on another, and this is all out of the site administrator's control.

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Response: Then take heart, dear reader, for your post shall not be edited, save for spelling and punctuation. I can't say what other "experience" the reader has had with our "editing," but we usually only make large alterations to feedback in two circumstances. The first is when the post has nothing to do with the origins debate, or asks a specific question best handled by email. It is omitted from the printed feedback because it would contribute little to the readers of the feedback. The only other circumstance is when we are sent an argument or discussion that takes up multiple screenfuls of text. This is not a discussion board; talk.origins serves that purpose. A large argument becomes unwieldly and is almost always repetitive of arguments found elsewhere in this Archive. In that case, the argument is summarized or a few of the best points are selected. However, we try very hard to preserve the "meat" of the argument for response.

We have no interest in presenting half-truths or "slanting" responses in any direction. Indeed, we seek the best feedback, for that gives us the most to respond to. See my response to "Andy" in the August 1998 Feedback for a more complete discussion of this issue.

I fear the reader has been woefully misled on most of the rest of her points. The Pope and many other Christians do indeed accept all of the conclusions of science regarding evolution, including the evolution of humans from other primate ancestors. (Not "half apes," by the way; see the Fossil Hominids FAQ.) They do not at all find this to contradict the Bible or call the Bible and God "liars," because they understand Genesis to be metaphoric, rather than literal truth. After all, Jesus spoke in parables; why shouldn't God? That is why many Christians who oppose creationism do so not on the grounds that it is bad science, but rather that it is (in their view) bad theology.

Finally, let me put Wesley Elsberry's statement into context. Those of us who have been regulars on the talk.origins newsgroup for some time have become quite accustomed to seeing people make the error of assuming that evolution implies atheism, or that the Bible must be completely false if evolution is true. This is not the case, but it is a common misunderstanding. As a result, many well-meaning people believe that those who accept evolution must therefore be atheists in need of conversion and attempt to proselytize them. It is the "If you believe in evolution, you will burn in Hell" argument, and Wesley has undoubtedly seen it hundreds, if not thousands, of times. It's hard not to be a bit flippant when confronted with that old chestnut once again. I sincerely doubt, however, that it was meant unkindly. May I suggest that the reader should not jump so easily to assign harsh motives to the actions of others?

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Response: We do not yet know enough about how evolution works to be able to make those kinds of predictions, though intelligent speculation is not out of the question. One thing we do know is that evolution is influenced by contingent events, such as mutations and changes in the environment. It is largely because we cannot accurately predict when and how these occur that we cannot predict future evolutionary trends. Also, certain physical changes (height, build, longevity, etc.) that occur due to lifestyle factors such as diet, exercise, hygene, etc. can be mistaken for evolutionary trends when in reality they are not. Finally, our technology is expanding so fast that very soon now we humans may be able to bypass biological evolution altogether and control our own future development directly. In that case, who knows what we may end up looking like?
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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: I'd like to add to Kevin's comments.

Evolution is a process of change that is highly chaotic. This means that very small differences in the starting point and conditions along the way will mean that the end result is very different. Unless we could predict the exact conditions and the actual starting population, then even if we had perfect knowledge of how evolution works, we could not make any such long term prediction.

However, some things are likely. Large population sizes tend to mean that the gene frequencies are kept more or less stable. If humans survive "in the wild" for a million years, then we'd probably look much the same as we do now. Large vertebrate, mammal, species tend to survive for between 2 and 10 million years relatively unchanged.

As Kevin notes, technology may change this equation a lot. But if it does, then again we cannot predict what fashion will introduce into our gene pool, nor what the fate of those genes will be once introduced, just as we cannot in principle predict the behaviour of the market in economics for very long.

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Author of: Punctuated Equilibria
Response:

As to the definite bias, it is thoroughly explained in the third link contained in the FAQ which Greg did read, cleverly camouflaged as "the Archive welcome file".

The example that is claimed to be untrue deserves examination. Was there really no definition given? I read, "Biological evolution is a change in the genetic characteristics of a population over time." That looks a lot like a definition to me. Is it clear? It looks clear to me. Is it unbiased? Well, it is the definition that biologists use, so whether it is unbiased or not in one's view depends upon whether one grants the people who study a subject the privilege of defining the terms they use. I think it is reasonable to grant that privilege, else one is dependent upon people who are admittedly ignorant about a topic for the definition of its terms. The links provided substantiate the claims in the FAQ entry. The purpose of the Welcome FAQ is not to provide completely delineated answers all on its own. It is a hypertext document for a reason: longer and more comprehensive expansions of the summary answers are provided in links.

Greg is encouraged to keep reading. The archive may or may not reduce Greg's problems with accepting that evolutionary biology is a valid scientific endeavor, but it represents a resource all too infrequently encountered on the WWW. If Greg is not interested in possible cognitive dissonance, he can still use the archive's extensive list of creationist and anti-evolutionist links as a resource to find more comforting material. Greg is invited to survey the sites linked there to see how many are unbiased, or even to assess how many link back to the talk.origins Archive.

If Greg does have the time to expand upon his views in the future, the appropriate place is the talk.origins newsgroup.

Wesley

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Response: Greg, I have a quesion to add to Wesley's comments.

Why do you think a theory cannot be a fact as well?

The definition of the word "theory" from the National Academy of Science:

"theories are explanations of natural phenomena built up logically from testable observations and hypotheses."

What part of that sentence excludes a theory from being a fact? None.

The rest of the paragraph:

"Scientists most often use the word "fact" to describe an observation. But scientists can also use fact to mean something that has been tested or observed so many times that there is no longer a compelling reason to keep testing or looking for examples. The occurrence of evolution in this sense is a fact. Scientists no longer question whether descent with modification occurred because the evidence supporting the idea is so strong."

Also, while I am here, you said you had problems with evolution as a theory. Yet you failed to list any reasons for your problems. Why so?

P.S. Microevolution and macroevolution are the same thing- evolution. It is just a matter of time for microevolution to be perceived as macroevolution. Creationists ask: "Why don't we observe macroevolution going on right now?" Timescales are too large (at least for large organisms) is one reason, the other is that they fail to identify a species in transition. Evolution is most easily identified in retrospect. Case in point- seals. How do you know that seals are not in a transition to a fully waterbound mammal? We don't. They probably are. The only way to know is to build a time machine, and zip into the future a few million years. Hindsight identifies transitional species.

I hope you will not be sad any more. Evolution is a very exciting, and intellectually stimulating subject.

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Response: It is true that many creationists only act as if they are basing their beliefs on empirical observations when, in fact, they are not. However, I would be very cautious about making pronouncements that science teaches us that Earth "is very insignificant in the universe." Science teaches us no such thing. That is your inference from scientific facts. However, that is all it is.

Science, in my estimation, is incapable of teaching us about (for example) the spiritual significance of anything. One must look to such disciplines as philosophy and theology for answers to questions of worth. To arrive at answers, these disciplines may consider various scientific facts. However, it is important to realize that it is still a philosophical or theological (and not a scientific) answer. Science is silent about such matters.

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Author of: Punctuated Equilibria
Response:

Either somebody looked at your note and fixed things before I took a look at the file, or you have a problem on your end of the connection. Make sure that your modem is not giving you problems.

There were some other spelling glitches in the file, but the sentence quoted above actually does not have the spelling errors indicated in it.

Most authors here would appreciate direct communication of possible errors in their work.

Wesley

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Response: One short addition to this: In almost every case, the name of the author of a particular FAQ file will be linked to that author's email address. Simply clicking on the link will allow you to reach that person directly.
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Response: This site provides a link to the full text of the Pope's speech on evolution at The Talk.Origins Archive: Other Web Sites. Hope this helps, Mark
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Response: It's not "according to evolutionists." It's "according to geologists." Geologists date rocks and the age of the Earth independently from the conclusions of evolutionary biology.

So-called "polystrate fossils" present no challenge to either conventional geology or evolution. Geologists have understood their formation for over a century. See the Polystrate Fossil FAQs for more information.

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Response: You are correct that Larry's FAQ does not present the evidence in support of the fact of evolution. This is because his FAQ was provided in order to answer a common confusion concerning what scientists mean when they say that evolution is a fact, and what they mean by saying that evolution is a theory.

He quotes a number of scientists, with a view to letting people know which propositions are taken by scientists as facts; and what scientists mean by the term theory, and the term fact.

You are asking a different question -- and it is a very good question. That is, you want to know why certain propositions are taken as facts. To answer that question ultimately comes down to presentation of all the evidence which supports those propositions.

The archive is organized so that different files focus on different questions. Some of the many reasons for taking evolution as fact are provided in the following files from the archive:

Evidence for Evolution: An Eclectic Survey
Observed Instances of Speciation
Some More Observed Speciation Events
Transitional Vertebrate Fossils
Fossil Hominids
Horse Evolution
Evidence for Jury-Rigged Design in Nature
Plagiarized Errors and Molecular Genetics

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: In much the same way that any macrolevel phenomenon can be. Evolution relies, for the most part on the properties of organisms and biological processes above the quantum level (exceptions might be the quantum tunnelling effects within microtubules in neurones). Natural selection occurs over populations of large, self-reproducing, objects, and the source of the variations it affects the relative frequencies of (mutations) need not be deterministic. In fact, determinism of physical events is really a matter of our ability to predict them rather than any fact about the events themselves.
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Response: We are glad you are enjoying your visit to talk.origins.

Evolutionary biology is not a belief. It is not based on faith. We do not need to have faith in the fossils, and DNA, and in descent with modification.

Evolution is a science that sits in the crossroads of many different disciplines, and it is indeed difficult to read the amount of information that it takes to get a coherent grasp of the subject. But folks must at least try... the FAQs on this website are a great way to start- brief, concise and well-organized!

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: We tend to agree (not all of us - this is a science site, not an ideological one, and scientists have differing views on the matter, like any one else) that science and religion are compatible. For example, see the section of the Evolution and Philosophy FAQ dealing with metaphysics, or the God and Evolution FAQ. The Bible is not a science textbook, and science textbooks are not theological tomes. Creationists - those who think the first chapters of Genesis are literally true - make the mistake of confusing the two.
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Author of: Punctuated Equilibria
Response:

The book is brand new, so I haven't seen it yet. I have, however, seen some of Dembski's previous essays on the topic, and his recent "First Things" article, which I take to be a summary of the important topics of his book.

There has been an evolution of Dembski's concept of a criterion for the detection of design. In 1996, he cast it in terms of an "Explanatory Filter". In 1997, he cast it as a theory of information, where the catch phrase was "complex specified information". In his First Things article, it is now "complexity-specification". The terminology has changed somewhat, but until I see the book, it is unclear that the underlying concept has altered in any substantial way.

Dembski says that there are three modes of explanation: Chance, Necessity, and Design. Chance is simply what we expect of random processes. Necessity is the expectation from natural law-like processes. Design is, of course, the expectation of intelligent shaping of an artifact. This three-bin classification dates back at least to his "Explanatory Filter", where we were invited to detect design in a phenomenon by steps: Eliminate necessity, or the action of law-like processes; eliminate chance, or random action; and choose between chance and design. There are two basic flaws in the Explanatory Filter idea. The first is that there is no category of "unknown". Every phenomenon gets tossed into one of the three bins; there is no bar to a phenomenon caused by an unknown law-like process being classified as if it were due to design. The second is that the order in alternatives are considered in the Explanatory Filter falsely forces a choice between Chance and Design. Chance should form a null hypothesis, and be tested first, not second. It is the operation of law-like process that will be most confounding with the possibility of Design, and so it is what should be compared and contrasted most closely with Design.

I hope to be able to read Dembski's book soon. One thing that I am concerned about is that this whole business of detection of design may be a rhetorical shell game. Dembski is fond of using examples of humans detecting the designs of other humans. Dembski is also fond of citing SETI research as an example of detecting design. What Dembski wants to establish, though, is the detection of novel designer/design relationships via his detection scheme, where we have no experience of a designer and no expectation of a design. The analogies from human design, including SETI, do not give a basis for establishing this capability. What it appears Dembski is doing, from the evidence of his past and present essays, is to select a set of attributes of human-designed artifacts which is held in common with biological organisms, but which is not held in common with non-biologically formed natural phenomena. In Dembski's terms, I believe that complexity-specification will prove to be a "fabrication" (as in a target bulls-eye painted around an already-implanted arrow) rather than a "specification" (as in an arrow shot into an already-painted target).

Wesley

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Response: If you consider a 1000 miles or more "near". Seriously, though, this is old news, and the evolutionists were the ones who first broke it. Besides, the results do not mean that she, and only she, produced modern humanity. It simply means that of all the women that contributed mitochondrial DNA to modern humans, hers was the only linneage to remain unbroken into modern times.
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Response:

Since radio-carbon dates can be matched to an independent absolute dating system, that of dendrochronology, if there were a large-scale shift in distribution of carbon isotopes, it should be seen in the tree-ring record. The last time I checked with people who knew their dendrochronology, there was no such large-scale change in isotope distributions. At that time, the oldest dendrochronology line extended back about 11,000 years. So, any supposed Velikovskian shenanigans with isotope ratios could not reasonably be taken to compress time to any more recent date than the longest established dendrochronology line that fails to show such changes. If that date is to 11,000 years ago, then one cannot reasonably speculate that an older C14 date would be mapped to anything more recent than 11,000 years ago even if a Velikovsky-style event changing isotope ratios were a historical reality. Those dendrochronologists keep working on cross-matching specimens to extend how far back certain lines go, so 11,000 years is probably too short a figure now, but it was current in 1993.

Wesley

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Response:

Shhh! Everybody at the University of Ediacara thinks they are working for these shiny new numbers that the Dean disburses (or is it disperses?) occasionally. Just last week I got one that was a multiple of four *different* prime numbers. You'll ruin everything if the faculty starts thinking that they should get actual *money*.

Wesley R. Elsberry
Samuel Johnson Professor of Non-Invasive Lexicography
University of Ediacara

From:
Response: Ermmm... harrumph! Wot? No money? That goes against the faculty union's motto "Nihil sine non lucre". I always thought there was something suspicious about the way the dean used the phrase "the numbers game" when discussing salary packaging. I'm going to talk to the rep, as soon as he sobers up, and for that matter as soon as I do too, and straighten this out once and for all.
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Response: Interesting that you should bring up dog breeds. Did you know that there are more differences between Great Danes and Chihuahuas than there are between wolves and coyotes? Yet wolves and coyotes are considered to be separate species. There are also more differences between those two dog breeds than there are between wolves and cape hunting dogs, yet wolves and cape hunting dogs are considered to be separate genera. If Great Danes and Chihuahuas had evolved in the wild instead of by the hand of man, they too would have been classified as different species, probably even different genera. It doesn't matter if they evolved by natural selection or artificial, if the genetic potential is not there, as Denton claimed it wasn't and you seem to agree with, the different dogs breeds could never have been produced.
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Author of: Punctuated Equilibria
Response:

Actually, it is mentioned in passing, but with no detail.

To expand somewhat, a comparison of the vertebrate camera eye as found in humans and the camera eye of coleid cephalopods turns up a number of differences. The difference of interest here is that the histology of the retina differs between the two. In the squid, the photoreceptors line the inside of the eye, so light directly impinges upon them. In humans, a layer of tissue overlays the photoreceptors, and provides both circulation and enervation for the photoreceptors. This leads to a topological problem: how to get the blood in and out and the nerve impulses to and from the brain? Answer: There's gotta be a hole somewhere, and this leads to a region in the image-forming area that is not covered with photoreceptors. Thus, a "blind spot".

Wesley

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Response: Since no one has dealt with this one yet, I would like to throw out a few things for consideration.

The transition itself is unlikely to leave any fossilized trace-- how could it? But I think however that we can make some inferences from living species: the platypus and the echidna (the only two mammals that lay eggs). They seem to have found an ecological niche, and, probably due to the isolation of Australia from competing species, have remained largely unchanged.

The inferences we can make are (at least) that fur and warm blood had already evolved before live birth, and that live birth had evolved before Australia became an isolated continent. I would characterize the loss of the shell as the internalization of the egg.

Did you use the talk.origins search engine? It works wonders. I'm going to do some research and see if I can't expound upon this reply.

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Author of: Archaeopteryx FAQs
Response: It should be pointed out that the only fiction, with regard to the Bible, that is highlighted by this site is the fiction that is the INTERPRETATION placed on the Bible by literalist creationists. The Bible is not under attack here, but the interpretation placed on the Bible by literalist creationists.

Chris

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Author of: Evolution and Philosophy
Response: 1. Evolution happens in other things. Sometimes it happens in computers, running a simulation of some features of biological evolution. Sometimes it occurs as social or conceptual evolution.

2. Evolution can stop temporarily at least if a given organism is so well-adapted to its environment or range that it is not under any selection. However, genetic drift (random changes to genes and random replication of those changes) is likely to make change start once again even in a selectively neutral situation.

3. Depends on what you mean by "god-like". We humans do some pretty god-like things these days using modern science, and we evolved.

4. There is no 4.

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Response: Yes, some of them are; others are more distantly related. However, a transitional form need not be a direct ancestor. It only needs to have structures that are intermediate between one form and another. The fact that it is not directly related is irrelevant, because evolution could have created the same structures more than once, such that in some species the process went no further, while in others it did. But it still had to go through the same steps in each case.
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Response: The planes were found under approx. 270 feet of snow, rather than ice. Given the average yearly snow fall in the area = 6.5 feet per year and the length of time the planes were there = 55 years (= 357 ft), the depth of burial is no problem.
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Author of: Archaeopteryx FAQs
Response: Zou & Niswander (1996) recently studied the effect of Bone Morphogenetic Protein (BMP) on the developing chick embryo. The BMP's affect growth by binding to receptor sites and causing a signal to be released. By a *single* amino acid substitution within the adenosine triphosphate binding site (Lysene 231 is changed to Argenine), a mutant form of the BMP was produced which binded with the receptor sites but did not induce signal transmission.

One of the results of this experiment was that at embryonic days 15 and 18, the large scales (scuta) that normally form over the dorsal surface of the foot were at least partially replaced by feathers. These ranged from thickening of the dorsal edge of the scale to short, fat feathers, to long, thin feather filaments. This result, "indicates a binary decision between the choice of scale or feather, such that high levels of BMP signaling may be required for scale formation or that scale morphogenesis may be specifically mediated through BMPR-1B" (p. 174).

In other words, avian scales produced identifiable feathers due to one single amino acid change. These 'protofeathers' were already feathers, and with no intermediate scale/feather needed.

Zou Hongyan & Niswander L. (1996) (3rd May) Requirement for BMP signaling in interdigital apoptosis and scale formation. Science, 272: 738-741.

Chris

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Response: It should also be pointed out that penguins possess on their bodies many of the intermediate forms between scales and true feathers, hence we have examples of what these intermediate forms could have been like.
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Response: Such probablility calculations are not possible. The most important reason is that to do such a calculation, you must assume that all present functional life forms are the goal, and not the result of the process, and then calculate backwards.

Since we have no indication that the present biological world represents the only possible "final product" of evolution, we cannot set the parameters, nor assign numerical values to any part of the process.

The odds of your winning the lottery are 100 million to one against. If you win, and are convinced that the incredible odds against your winning are evidence that there was some sort of 'intelligent intervention' acting on you behalf, that would be an Ad Hoc explanation, and irrational. If, however, you predicted that you would win beforehand, that would indeed be an indication that something hitherto unexplained is going on.

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Author of: Evolution and Chance
Response: I never fail to be amazed at the inability of some people to understand that chance is only half the equation of Darwinian evolution, and that selection is the other half. This other half is what makes evolution "go". As is correctly observed ad nauseum, a large number of highly improbable events is, um, well, highly improbable in the extreme in a single go. But highly improbable events happen all the time. If they happen to be even slightly more efficient changes to living things, then the mere fact that living things reproduce means that more copies of those improbable events get distributed about, reducing the improbability that one of them will have another improbable event happen to it. The improbabilities are not astronomical.

What the objectors want to do is a two-step card trick. First they "assume" (that is, they hide this move in rhetoric) that all these improbable events must happen all at once - the 747 move in the Evolution and Chance FAQ . This is absurd, for the reason given above - things get reproduced.

The second step in the card trick is to assume that because a sequence of events in highly unlikely, therefore they could not have happened without guidance. But even if a stone causes a rockslide, the actual sequence is vanishingly unlikely even though rockslides behave much the same. This is because the pathways of change and movement the many rocks take are sensitive to the initial conditions they started from. So, from the anti-evolutionary argument we ought to conclude that rockslides cannot happen without intelligent guidance. It's a point of view, I suppose.

Calculations like the one above are simply meaningless unless we have some way to tell if the probability distributions used to get that result are correct. Probabilities are the distributions of many events. But the pathway of the evolution of life is only one among many. Probabilities in the objective sense don't apply here, and such calculations are useless.

Finally, this feedback shows a fine disregard to the actual work done on the propensities of abiotic chemistry to bind, react, and catalyse. Work done so far shows that, if the conditions are right, the "likelihood" of life arising and evolving is like the likelihood of a car accident. A split second before it happens - that is, when conditions are really conducive - the events are not only likely, but inevitable.

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Response: Hi,

You have an interesting idea that I myself have had-- that tales of dragons, which transcend culture and geography, are the result of humans finding dinosaur fossils and making inferences about them based on popular mythology.

The notion that dinosaurs were contemporary with humans, however, finds absolutely no support in mainstream science. Imagination is an important facet of human intelligence. (It must always give way, however, to empirical evidence).

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Response: John,

You are free to believe what you like. That is what's great about this country.

Much of your post, however, deals with scripture, which is outside the scope of science. You might try to find a theology message board. Science cannot be used to support the scripture, because such claims as you listed are not testable.

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Response: A careful examination of the flood myths listed in the Flood Stories FAQ reveals that there are too many variations in the stories for them all to be describing the same flood as Genesis 6-9. (Genesis 6-9 is almost certainly an adaptation of the older Sumerian myth of Gilgamesh.) Some stories describe the flood as covering the entire Earth, while others tell of localized floods, albeit large ones. Some survivors floated in boats and others climbed to high ground, while in some stories everyone died.

People create stories to explain the world surrounding them. This is especially true of significant natural disasters, which become strongly imprinted on the memories of people who survived them. Ask anyone in south Florida about Hurricane Andrew, or speak with survivors of the earthquake in Kobe, Japan, or of any other natural disaster.

It is natural to think that primitive peoples with no understanding of the processes that shape our world--meteorology, vulcanology, plate tectonics, and the like--would attempt to create stories to explain the events that have been important in their lives. Consider this: The most fertile land is found in flood plains. People depend on fertile land for agriculture and water for drinking and irrigation. That's why people have tended to settle near rivers throughout history, precisely where floods are likely to occur. It should be no surprise that many cultures have flood myths. Moreover, as cultures migrate and spread, they take their stories with them. When two cultures interact, often a mutated version of an important story will be passed along.

In short, flood myths are a fascinating glimpse at how varied is the human imagination at describing similar events, such as localized floods, all around the world. But evidence for a Earth-covering global flood? Hardly.

From:
Response: Every culture also has its own version of Cinderella and Puss 'n Boots. Does that mean we should waste time trying to discover the real historical events behind all these stories?
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Response: Henry Fairfield Osborne, once president of the American Museum of Natural History, died in 1935, so it is unlikely that he made the quote you attributed to him in 1980. Nevertheless, it would not surprise me if he made such a statement while he was alive. Osborne was part of the eugenics movement, which was popular among the social elite at the start of the 20th century. It is a tragedy that so many espoused (and continue to espouse) racist views such as Osborne's. But does the fact that evolutionists have been racists prove that evolution promotes racist thinking? Or rather, does it prove that racists will marshall flawed evolutionary arguments to support their prejudices? Just as many people have used the Bible to provide a foundation for their racist views, so too have many racists used evolution to do the same. And yet neither Christianity nor science promotes racism.

See the Evolution and Philosophy FAQ and Creationism and Racism FAQ for more on this topic.

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Response: Your argument above is discussed within the Problems with a Global Flood FAQ in the section entitled "New Ocean Basins." Furthermore, the section entitled "Vapor Canopy" discusses problems if the canopy were holding a mere 40 feet of water. (Your criticisms are apparently of the Vapor Canopy FAQ, which has a considerably noarrower focus than the Global Flood FAQ.)
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Response: I assume you mean the 1963 version directed by Peter Brook rather than the 1990 version directed by Harry Hook. It may be purchased online from Reel.com for $25.99 or rented for 7 days for $4.50. [Obviously the prices Kenneth cites are now out of date.]
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Author of: Punctuated Equilibria
Response:

There have been sporadic forays of International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) types into online discussions. They are anti-evolutionists who argue for mankind being present throughout earth history. Actually, the program "Mysterious Origins of Man" that aired some time ago was based upon the book, "Forbidden Archaeology", which is authored by a couple of ISKCON devotees, Michael Cremo and Richard Thompson (aka "Sadaputa Dasa", IIRC). There are several FAQs concerning the program. The most general one is NBC's "The Mysterious Origins of Man".

In general, the ISKCON perspective is that common descent is a fiction because all the organisms existed from the beginning, including man. The SciCre perspective is that common descent is wrong because all the organisms were specially created far more recently than the data seems to indicate.

I don't know whether other flavors of Hinduism oppose evolutionary biology or not. Buddhism seems to have no difficulty in molding itself to conform with current scientific knowledge. I'm not certain what a Taoist would have to say about evolutionary biology, but it would likely be pithy, ironic, and entertaining.

Wesley

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