Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I would like to comment on the geological timeline. Of the twenty other websites I looked at that also had timelines this was the best I found. It had the exact info I needed about eras, years, evolution, etc. that I was looking for. Thank You. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Hello,
I will not profess to be an expert on anything, however I just had to add a comment that really helped me. I once read the most remarkable book, one that was brilliantly written and in my option the best you will read presented in a unbiased way. Its called 'Life - how did it get here, by evolution or creation'? Sadly its not available to buy from the shops. However its free from Jehovah's Witnesses. Don't let that put you off, you have NOTHING to loose. Some who have read it still believe in what they did before they read it, however its such a fantastic book, that presets facts from both sides and its illustrated so well. And its not in a techno language. I think you can go to www.watchtower.org to order it. Let me know what you think, its not really a religious book its about how we got here and the amazing universes as well as the fossil record ect. Anyway, I really enjoyed it and have read it many times, and no I am not on commission lol, just thought it was appropriate Best wishes Tim |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thanks for the recommendation. We already have two reviews of Life - How Did It Get Here? By Evolution Or By Creation? (and [2]) available in the archive. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | AFTER gazing
at the stars on a clear, dark night, we come inside, chilly
and blinking, our minds spinning with vast beauty and a
multitude of queries. Why is the universe here? Where did
it come from? Where is it going? These are the questions
that many try to answer.
[Many kilobytes of stuff from http://www.watchtower.org/library/g/1996/1/22/universe_something_missing.htm deleted - WRE] |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: |
Presenting other's words as if they were your own is dishonest. If you want to suggest a link, we have a convenient form for submitting a link at the bottom of our Other Links page. In your last feedback item, you said that you weren't on commission. As you continue to push Jehovah's Witness materials, the veracity of that statement comes into question. Wesley |
From: | |
Response: | Two
inventions, more than any other set us on the path to
modern science. One is related to your opening poetic; the
telescope. It forced rational people to recognize both the
immensity of the universe, and that it was not ordered in
the way that the professionally religious decreed.
The other was the microscope which showed that the world at our fingertips (even on our finger tips) was totally unexpected and unexplained by theologians. These devices preceded the scientific revolution in geology and biology. The maintenance of the ancient point of view requires that you ignore the telescope, and the microscope - that you view the universe wearing blinders and look no further than your hand. Spending some time in the T.O. archives (or a good science library) will start you toward answering the questions you posed. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Does anyone think that religion over time had anything to do with the evolution of the human brain? For example could it be part of the reason humans are so aware of themselves? |
Responses | |
From: | |
Author of: | The Recession of the Moon and the Age of the Earth-Moon System |
Response: | For a more detailed & quantitative version of John's argument, as to the relation between language and the evolution of the brain, see this book: The Symbolic Species: The Co-Evolution of Language and the Brain, by Terence W. Deacon. W.W. Norton & Co., 1998. |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | I do, but it
is a rather tenuous link.
Human brains are unusual in that they are much larger than the ordinary primate growth curve, so they need to be accounted for. One way to account for it is to seek explanation in the complexity, not of the environment, for many organisms live in the same environment with smaller brains, including our close cousins the Australopithicenes, but in the social interactions between humans. In short, we adapted to ourselves. One way we did this is in language, and in telling each other stories as ways to hold the social group together and to organise the fair distribution of resources. One way we did that is to tell stories about the world, the forces of nature, and the past heroes of the group. In this, I believe, is the origins of religion, in the mythological stories we used to provide the world with a narrative. This sets up a feedback loop. Once we can tell stories to each other about what is in our heads and the world, we get selection for better storytelling, and so religious ritual and myth makes for bigger brains. Please understand, though, that this is set back around a couple of hundred thousand years ago, and does not reflect on current religious views, which evolved in a rather different fashion in a rather different social structure. So we adapt to the myths and rituals by getting bigger storytelling brains. This is, perforce, the simplified version and a bit of a Just So story, but backed by modern neurobiology and understanding of social patterns and dynamics. |
From: | |
Response: | As opposed
to the notion that religiosity influenced human evolution
you propose, I invite you to consider that the human brain
'affords' us a rather odd, and perhaps unique neurological
state. This is the disassociative state. Disassociative,
and hallucinatory states are easily induced by sleep
deprivation, fasting, or trance induction. All of these
activities are central to the practice of mystics and
religious ecstasists, and are employed generally in
cross-cultural examples of divinitory ritual.
I would further observe that there are several drugs that also produce this "religious" mental state. This is mentioned not as a recommendation, but as an observation that psychic states are fundamentally biochemical. Thus, human evolution made religiously interpreted mental states possible. These are not new observations. I suggest the following reading: Crapanzano, Vincent and Vivian Garrison 1977 Case Studies in Spirit Possession New York: John Wiley and Sons Hurd, G. S., E. M. Pattison 1984 "Manifestations of Possession in Novel Ecological Contexts," in Ecological Models in Clinical and Community Mental Health, W. A. O'Connor and B. Lubin (ed.s). John Wiley & Sons: New York. Klienman, Arthur 1980 Patients and Healers in the Context of Culture: An exploration of the borderland between Anthropology, Medicine, and Psychiatry. University of California Press Ott, Jonathan 1976 Hallucinogenic Plants of North America. Berkeley: Wingbow Press Pattison, E. M., Joel Kahan, G. S. Hurd 1986 "Trance and Possession States," In Handbook of Altered States of Consciousness. B.B. Walman and M. Ullman (ed.s) New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, Also look over these: Amazon Books: The "God" Part of the Brain Now, as the other comments have indicated, humans are also unusual that these physical states can be altered by thought and language. Thus, in humans, the ability to alter physical states by cognition may have also contribute to evolutionary selection. This is not religion per se. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Nobody has ever answered this question I have. It even stumps the missionaries. Creation and evolution are the same thing. A force had to take effect to make living matter from nonliving matter. The days in Genisis are synonyms for eons. The order in which they happen is mostly correct. We witnessed evidence of evolution with the Black Plegue by the Delta 32 mutation that gave some people immunity. Where did the Delta 32 mutation come from? God always finds a way, whether it be by a comet or by the person's actions. Why is there an argument? Because, whoever wrote Genesis didn' think it mattered. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Many people believe that a supreme being somehow guided evolution. Evolutionary biology simply cannot address this question. However, to claim organisms evolved in the order in which they are presented in Genesis is simply incorrect. Flowering plants do not appear in the fossil record before animals, for instance. But you are correct in thinking the major problems arise when Genesis is taken as literal truth, rather than an educational allegory. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Let me begin
by stating that you have a great website. Moreover, before
I begin with my subject, I'd like to state that I am not a
creationist and do accept evolutionary theory. In fact, I
believe it is the best scientific explanation for the
diversity of life on earth at this time. However, having
said that, I find it difficult to accept your view that
evolution is a fact. In fact, I have to agree with the
creationists when they state that evolution is not an
established fact (not that creation is either). The
following are the reasons for my conclusion (but please
correct me if I am wrong or misinformed).
First, an article in your website defines evolution as changes in allele frequency within a gene pool from one generation to the next. If this was all that was meant by the term "evolution", then nearly all educated individuals would have no problem with your claim that evolution is a fact. There is ample evidence for such a conclusion. However, while this might be the technical definition of evolution, this is not what is implied when the term is used within the context of the creation-evolution debate. The definition of evolution extends far beyond this understanding. What evolutionists state (and is understood by the public when the term, evolution, is used) is that all life on earth arose from a common ancestor, and that the diversity of life is the result of "descent with modification" from this common ancestor. This seems to be Darwin's view as well. Thus, it would be more correct to define evolution as changes in allele frequency within a gene pool from one generation to the next which, along with other factors, have generated all of the diversity of life on earth from some ultimate common ancestor. If this is what is meant by evolution, then I would say that evolution cannot be called a "fact" for there is insufficient evidence to make such a bold claim as this. At best, we can say that there is sufficient evidence for someone to reasonably conclude that descent with modification from a common ancestor has taken place. But we cannot call this a fact. It is an interpretation of what took place based upon given empirical data. Second, many people (including evolutionists) believe that evolution means all life arose from a single common ancestor --a single organism or type of organism. However, if abiogenesis is mathematically possible (and true), then there is no basis for limiting the diversity of life to a single common ancestor. It should be possible that the diversity of life arose from several different lines. Perhaps the plants arose from a common ancestor, but from an ancestor not shared in common with the "advanced" animals, such as lions, dolphins, and humans. I realize that abiogenesis is not directly related to evolutionary theory, but my point is: Why do evolutionists claim that it is a single common ancestor that gave rise to all of Earth's diversity? Why not two, three, or four lines (one representing each kingdom)? Moreover, is there sufficient evidence of a single common ancestor to conclude that this is a fact? While the term "theory" may not have the same meaning when employed by a scientists versus a layman, the term "fact" is definitively a more potent term than "theory". And I find it difficult to accept that evolution is a fact, though I do agree it is a very good (even profound) theory or explanation of the history of life on earth. Please comment. ZZ |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | Creationists
misuse a lot of terms - that is no good reason to revise
them in science or when discussing science. However, the
definition of evolution as allele frequency changes in
populations was devised to discuss evolution in scientific
contexts, not to convince creationists. The argument of
those who prefer that definition (and not all biologists
do) is that it implies that evolution will occur in the
larger sense unless prevented, and this is true. The
problem with those who think that "large" evolution will
not occur is that they have never been able to show why
allele frequency change won't result in the increase in the
diversity of life. They assert it, but no reason is ever
forthcoming other than "there are barriers to change over
'kinds'."
In any case, cladogenetic change (increases in the numbers of species, and the larger groups species comprise, by branching - what Darwin called common descent) is as well attested a fact as anything in biology. We've seen it. And for each speciation event, no matter how large in the apparent changes, the reply from anti-evolutionists has been "but it's still the X kind", as if we expected anything else. All mammals are still vertebrates, and all vertebrates are still animals, and all animals are still eukaryotes, and so forth. And each of those "kinds" was once a single species. As to a single common ancestor - Darwin thought that there would be "a few [original] forms, or one". These days a few people think that there were several original forms of life because lineages were not isolated then as now. Also, and this is my own opinion, you need an ecology for life to exist, and I think that life always existed in more than one "form". The base of the tree of life might have been a tangle of roots... As to the "theory versus fact" bit, we have a very good FAQ explaining the meanings of these terms in biology - and in both the common sense and the scientific sense, evolution is a fact, and there is a theory to explain it. In fact, there are more than one. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Elephanticity |
Comment: | I came across a quote from a famous Theist the other day, and instantly thought of some of the oft-refuted canards posted in the Feedback here.
It seems to me this caution would apply to many more scientific disciplines than just Astronomy. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Scott G. |
Comment: | Dear Talk
Origins
I read the comment by that creationist trying to argue the case of creationism based on COMMON SENSE!!! Common sense depends on every individuals point of view and observation. If a christian sees the world as needing a creator, than that is his belief. If an evolutionist makes an observation that monkeys are similar to man, than that is what he views as common sense. That does not mean much, one way or another. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | In a recent
exchange with a creationist, he turned me onto a scientific
theory he called "Inference of Design." He assures me that
this is a solid scientific theory, with capital letters and
everything.
That's gotta be the dumbest thing I have heard all week. We see a pattern, therefore it must be designed? My uncle and my grandfather got into an argument once, about whether my infant cousin's features reflected one side of the family or the other's. They looked at her and were sure she had a 'Smith' family nose, or 'Jones' family cheekbones. They 'inferred' the dominance of familial genetic traits by seeing them reflected in her features. The fact that my cousin was adopted from outside either genetic line hardly slowed them down. Clearly, arguments based on what we project onto an object, or a system, or a person, say a lot more about us than about the subject. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Ah, you have encountered William Dembski's "Design Inference". Like you, I was less than impressed. I posed some questions about evolutionary computation back in 1997 that Dembski is still apparently trying to deal with. I outlined a number of problems in my review of "The Design Inference" back in 1999. But I can narrow it down to a couple of URLS that you should visit:
Those two pages link to a whole bunch of criticism of the "Design Inference". Enjoy. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I have no idea what this site is about, but I do know that if you determine what age the fossils are by type of dirt, and the dirt by the type of fossils, that means that the whole geologic time scale is an example of Circular Reasoning. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Please have a look at our FAQ on Radiometric Dating and the Geological Time Scale by Andrew MacRae. Feel free to tell us about any specific problems you have with the reasoning outlined in that document. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | But WHY did horses evolve? Why did they have different teeth because they ate tougher plants? why? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | If you mean, why did they evolve from older forms that were browsers and had three toes to grazers with one hoof, the answer is simple - grass evolved. As a result, herbivores had to adapt to silicaceous (silicon containing) food sources and have feet capable of running over grasslands from predators (or towards prey - grass lands affected many species). |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Congratulations for putting out the best Evolution website out there. You guys worked long and hard to provide a wonderful archive of Articles, Debates, and plain scientific fact. Any reasonable person could come to your site, and find just what he/she needs in order to understand Evolution. Great job and keep up the great work. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | OK, let me get this straight. You guys call evolution a science, though it disagrees, indeed it disproves many scientific LAWS that are used as disclaimers of all other theories. First of all, the 2nd law of Thermodynamics says that the earth is winding down. Not only does that clearly imply that the earth was, at one time, wound up, but it also stands in stark contrast to the THEORY of evolution. Evolutionists believe that things are becoming more orderly. How can both be true? Also, if evolution were accepted as true, how come it doesn't occur today? Not one individual can say with even the slightest bit of certainty that they have seen evolution today, it simply doesn't happen. Fossils suggest that the earth, at one time, was covered with water. Noahs flood, and the remains of the ark on Mt. Aarat, would collaborate with that idea. Ok, this is the deal. Neither evolution nor creation can scientifically be proven true, but evolution CAN be scientifically disproved. How then can a theory that goes against scientific law, be accepted? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Evolutionary biology is science. Your problem is that you've been listening to people who don't know what science is, but are willing to tell whoppers about it to preserve some of their ignorant ideologically-based preconceptions. We hear people claim that evolution contradicts the second law of thermodynamics (SLoT). Uniformly, these people don't know thermodynamics, don't understand evolution, and couldn't form a valid argument if their lives depended on it. We have a whole section on thermodynamics here on the Archive. I have a challenge for those who wish to claim that evolution contradicts what we know about thermodynamics. This challenge lays out what is necessary to make a valid argument along those lines. So far, no antievolutionist has succeeded in meeting the challenge. It is a favorite canard of antievolutionists that evolution cannot be observed. A cursory look at the scientific literature would disabuse them of this notion, but actual research and intellectual honesty is anathema to evolution deniers. The Archive hosts several resources that show that evolution is, indeed, observed to occur.
Fossils suggest that evolution happened. If Noah's Flood were a global deluge, it should have left some evidence behind. Geologists in the 19th who believed in the biblical creation account went and looked. The most prominent of these, Adam Sedgwick, had to admit that they had failed to find the signs of such a deluge that must have existed had it occurred. See this essay on Sedgwick's recantation. As for Noah's Ark on Mt. Ararat, nobody has demonstrated that there are any remnants to be found there. We have a large number of resources on Flood Geology here on the Archive. Theories and conjectures which contradict empirically observable phenomena can't be accepted. Evolutionary biology fits what we observe empirically. Young-earth creationism contradicts what we observe empirically. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Mathematical
probability: "it is so improbable that one and only one
species out of 3,0000,000 should develop into man, that it
certainly was not the case".
By the same argument, it is improbable that my 2 parents should have met, their 4 parents should have met, their 8 parents should have met, etc. It is so improbable that I was born, that it certainly didn't happen. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Hey, that sounds familiar... Have a look at this old post of mine. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Alice Ospovat |
Comment: | I just
wanted to share my theory on why you've gotten so much
feedback from confused people who think you are the Flat
Earth Society. A Google search on "flat earth" turns up the
Talk Origins site in about sixth place, but more
importantly, as the first site in the search that includes
content written by real Flat Earthers, and with a title
that doesn't make its contents clear. The first site is a
parody, the next is a fantasy gaming site, a couple more
are sites discussing Flat Earthers, and then the Talk
Origins link shows up with the heading "The International
Flat Earth Society."
I suspect that a lot of people see the link, follow it, and don't actually read the page at all before leaving stupid feedback. Although you've mostly solved the problem by disabling the feedback link, it seems like you might still improve visitors' understanding by using a longer and more explanatory page title, for instance "The International Flat Earth Society really exists" or "The story behind Flat Earthers," etc. Also, thanks for maintaining such a great site. It's the best evolution site on the net by far. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
That's a good point. I've changed the title of the page to say, "Documenting the Existence of 'The International Flat Earth Society'". I can't say that I'm optimistic about how much influence that will have on those determined to leave feedback on the topic. Comments like yours help make the effort worthwhile. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I've read Ted Holden's bizarre theories and the refutations of them. I thought Holden was barking in the first place, and that impression has certainly been confirmed. But I'd like to know: what is the equation relating weight, height (or body-section length) and muscular strength in humans? |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Roughly speaking, muscle strength increases proportionally to the cross sectional area, or as the square of the linear size. Weight increases as the cube of the linear size. Therefore, strength to weight is proportional to the 2/3 power of size. There are lots of complications, of course -- musculo-skeletal systems are arrangements of levers, which can affect the effectiveness of activity, and respiration rates come into play as well. It's never as simple as one straightforward equation. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | My husband has been trying to "prove" to me that dinosaurs and people once lived together. He is a YEC (literal 6 day type) and he wants really hard to try to disprove evolution. He sent me pictures of these Ica Stones which have carvings of people riding dinosaurs and stuff like that. I'm sure that it is a hoax, but he seems convinced. Is there any info you have on these? Also, thank you very much for this wonderful website, its been a wonderful tool for me to have answers to the questions asked me by my creationist friends. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The Ica stones are almost certainly modern folk art designed to sell to the gullible. An article by Massimo Polidoro ("Ica Stones: Yabba-Dabba Do!", Skeptical Inquirer 26(5), p. 24, Sept/Oct 2002) relates how a couple peasants have carved them, basing their designs on comic books, school books, and magazines. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | This question may have been covered elsewhere, but I have not found it. I was reading the 29 evidences for macroevolution, specifically about common descent, that all life descended from one ancestor.I am curious what theories there are about why only one lineage accounts for all life, why all life shares certain attributes from a very primative form. Does this mean that the transitional object from non-life to life only happened once? Or that all other transitions died off, either before or after the common ancestor? If the common ancestor is more advanced than the first transitional object, perhaps along the lines of a prokaryotic cell organism, why did only one produce every other type of organism? It looks like, according to the geologic timeline on your site, that it took from 300 million to 1000 million years, at most, from the formation of oceans and the earth's crust to prokaryotic organisms. In the 2800myears that followed, why not any more transitons from non-life to life, at least any that sustained a lineage? Not even some fun bacteria? Perhaps I am missing the obvious, but I don't think that compitition for resources would be an issue at this level. Luv the site. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Much of your
comment is questions about the origin of life. The common
reaction from most evolutionary biologists who debate with
creationists is to avoid questions too close to origin of
life issues. The most simple explanation for this is that
evolutionary theory operates after the origin of life
(OOL), and is therefore not concerned with the
origin of life. And this is very true.
But, a partial answer to your question(s) can be found without considering Origin of Life (OOL) research at all.
I think that if you consider this a bit more, you will see that this was a clear prediction of evolutionary theory that was only recently confirmed. If all life descends from one life form, then all life will share some common attributes. An interesting article is: J. Kirk Harris, Scott T. Kelley, George B. Spiegelman, and Norman R. Pace 2003 The Genetic Core of the Universal Ancestor
The endosymbiont hypothesis (that organelles such as mitochondria are the symbiotic association of formerly independent life forms) rather suggests that there were multiple "origins" of life. A current discussion I recommend is : Dyall, Sabrina D., Patricia J. Johnson 2000 Origins of hydrogenosomes and mitochondria: evolution and organelle biogenesis. Current Opinion in Microbiology 3:404-411. A good review (and an extension) of the literature on the origin of cells is: Martin, William, Michael J. Russell 2002 On the origins of cells: a hypothesis for the evolutionary transitions from abiotic geochemistry to chemoautotrophic prokaryotes, and from prokaryotes to nucleated cells Philosophical Transactions: Biological Sciences Vol.358, No.1429:59-85 It is interesting to me that all that Darwin had to say about the origin of life in his Origin of Species was,
So I note that Darwin was consistent in his opinion that there were few first life forms, and merely a possibly that there could have been only one. Also note that Darwin is little interested in the issue using well under one page of text from a 450 page book. Following a brief period of optimism from the early 1950s to the late 1960s, many scientists became discouraged about origin of life research. There seemed to be too many open questions about the early geochemical conditions of the Earth to properly constrain the problem. But, the overall scientific world view surely does encompass the nebular theory of planetary formation, the age of the Solar System, and (in my understanding) the origin of life. And, the last twenty years have resolved many of the issues that once seemed to have been out of reach. There is good evidence for very early landforms, and oceans: MOJZSIS, STEPHEN J., T. MARK HARRISON, ROBERT T. PIDGEON 2001 Oxygen-isotope evidence from ancient zircons for liquid water at the Earth's surface 4,300 Myr ago Nature 409, 178-181 (11 January ) Sleep, N. H., K. Zahnle, P. S. Neuhoff 2001 Initiation of clement surface conditions on the earliest Earth PNAS-USA v.98 no. 7: 3666-3672 Wilde, Simon A., John W. Valley, William H. Peck, Collin M. Graham 2001 Evidence from detrital zircons for the existence of continental crust and oceans on Earth 4.4 Gyr ago Nature Vol 409:175-181 The following comments from Lazcano and Miller are quite relevant: A. Lazcano & S.L. Miller 1994 How long did it take for life to begin and evolve to cyanobacteria Journal of Molecular Evolution 39(6): 546-554, December, From the abstract:
So, even if we accept the notion that heavy impacts would have sterilized the Earth around 3.8Ga there is ample scope for life to originate by the age of the earliest known microfossils around 3.5Ga. There is more recent research results that show that Miller was too pessimistic in his opinion of hydrothermal vents as productive locations for the origin of life. The next three articles will give you a good set of materials to begin that reading. Amend, J. P. , E. L. Shock 1998 Energetics of Amino Acid Synthesis in Hydrothermal Ecosystems Science Volume 281, number 5383, Issue of 11 Sep , pp. 1659-1662. A. T. FISHER, E. E. DAVIS, M. HUTNAK, V. SPIESS, L. ZÜHLSDORFF, A. CHERKAOUI, L. CHRISTIANSEN, K. EDWARDS, R. MACDONALD, H. VILLINGER, M. J. MOTTL, C. G. WHEAT, K. BECKER 2003 Hydrothermal recharge and discharge across 50 km guided by seamounts on a young ridge flank Nature 421, 618 - 621 (2003); Imai, E., Honda, H., Hatori, K., Brack, A. and Matsuno, K. 1999 Elongation of oligopeptides in a simulated submarine hydrothermal system Science 283(5403):831–833.
A brief introduction to the pre-cellular competition will come from these articles: Mulkidjanian, Armen Y., Dmitry A Cherepanov, Michael Y Galperin 2003 Survival of the fittest before the beginning of life: Selection of the first oligonucleotide-like polymers by UV light BMC Evolutionary Biology 2003 3:12 (published online 28 May 2003) Woese, Carl 1998 The universal ancestor PNAS Vol. 95, Issue 12, 6854-6859, June 9 Woese, Carl 2002 On the evolution of Cells PNAS Vol. 99 13:8742-8747, June 25
Once life forms became common, the conditions that had contributed to the origin of life no longer existed- transformed by the biochemical products of life. An additional problem that exists for the delineation of separate original lineages is lateral genetic transfer. For example: Harris et al (2003) ( cited above) and, Olendzenski, Lorraine, Olga Zhaxybayeva, J. Peter Gogarten 2000 How Much Did Horizontal Gene Transfer Contribute to Early Evolution?: Quantifying Archaeal Genes in Two Bacterial Lineages (Abstract) General Meeting of the NASA Astrobiology Institute. My current favorite book on the Origin of Life for non-specialists is: Iris Fry, 2000 The Emergence of Life on Earth: A Historical and Scientific Overview Rutgers University Press |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Great collection of information here. I admit I have creationist leanings, but not because of the scientific debate. I haven't seen anything addressing the theological problem: no creation (special creation) - no fall, no fall - no atonement, no atonement - no Christ. Do you have anything to refer me to? |
Response | |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | Not really.
That is an issue you and your religious authorities have to
work out. It appears not to be a major problem for most
denominations of the Christian Church, so perhaps it is not
so great a problem as it seems.
We here have an eclectic collection of faiths and non-faiths, but this site is for refutation of bad science, primarily. Some incorrigibles have written on philosophy, though, but they are safely ignored. At least one writer thinks the two views are compatible:
and here is a Mormon compatibilist view, and here a more orthodox Christian survey of views and philosophies. Finally, to be complete, here is a 1916 edition of an 1899 Bible Study that asserts the incompatibility. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | Ya'll are danged near crazy. Everybody knows that the world is a triangle. I'm sliding down my waterfall right now, and i'm in the ocean ther. In Kentucky we have this here theory called "Triangle Earth Theorist." Yeppers. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Does "the four corners of the earth" refer to its tetrahedral shape? |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | hi,
what are some older books than the bible that I can read? thank you, bomit |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: |
Well, first we have to determine what you mean by "older than the bible". Do you mean older than any portion of the written bible? If so, only writings predating 586 BCE will do, since prior to the Babylonian exile the Hebrews utilized oral tradition rather than a written record. But perhaps you meant books which were written before the latest written part of the bible, which would mean anything prior to about 100 AD would do. Or perhaps you meant any book written prior to the codification of what books comprised the bible, which would mean any book written before 400 AD would do. I guess we will pass over the issue of "that I can read", since that would require some knowledge of your particular expertise in ancient languages. Assuming that the reader is capable of reading any ancient text that is available, we can move on. The Egyptian Book of the Dead at about 1600 BCE easily predates the earliest written part of the bible. Fortunately, there is an online version. Many other written materials of great antiquity can be viewed via the CWRU ETANA collection. Wesley |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Fred |
Comment: | I hope this
answers your question.
Was the flood in Noah’s day just a local flood? Answer: Many people have heard Dr. Hugh Ross teach that the flood was local and only killed the people and animals in the area where Noah lived. Let’s see what God says: (edited Genesis 6:7, and 6:11-22, or so. I suggest that any interested party can use a searchable online Bible, G.H. My favorite is: |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | If you want
to take issue with Hugh Ross, I suggest that you visit his
website: Reasons To Believe
The seem to be three topics that are most difficult for creationists to reconcile their particular biblical interpretations with the direct observation of the world. One of these is the lack of geological data that is consistent with a global flood. The classic statement of the creationist's position from this century is found in The Genesis Flood by Whitcomb and Morris. How this became so central to the creationist worldview is examined by Ronald Numbers in The Creationists: The Evolution of Scientific Creationism . If you would like to learn about the ancient literary tradition that was the original source for the biblical flood story I recommend Stephanie Dalley's Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, The Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. Revised . Blenkinsopp (1992) and Friedman (1997) are very important discussions of the flood's role in mainstream biblical exegesis. An interesting idea linking ethnoastronomy with the flood myth is found here: Introduction to Astronomy: EthnoAstronomy: Star Myths Deluge Stories Note that I can't direct you to any geological data that supports the Flood story because there is none. Various creationist "ministries" have tried to selectively point to one small geological section or another as "proof" of their biblical interpretations, but all these fail when critically examined. Some relevant websites for consideration are: By Joe Meert
And here at TalkOrigins Archives Blenkinsopp, Joseph 1992 The Pentateuch: An Introduction to the First Five Books of the Bible The Anchor Bible Reference Library New York: ABRL/Doubleday Friedman, Richarrd Elliott 1987 Who Wrote the Bible New York:Harper and Row (Paperback Edition) Dalley, Stephanie 2000 Myths from Mesopotamia: Creation, The Flood, Gilgamesh, and Others. Revised Oxford: Oxford University Press Numbers, Ronald L. 1993 The Creationists: The Evolution of Scientific Creationism Berkeley: University of California Press Whitcomb, John C., Henry M. Morris 1961 The Genesis Flood Grand Rapids: Baker Book House |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | You got a
letter which said:
I read the links you pointed to and they all missed a possible origin for this urban legend. If you do "some scientific stuff and calculate[...]" you will find that the day is 23 hour and 56 minutes. Really! 4 minutes short. Well, sort of, really. What we call a "day" (speaking of length) is what astronomers call the Mean Solar Day. That's what our clocks run on. The clock motors that turn a telescope (except a solar telescope) use the 23 hour and 56 minute day called the Sidereal Day which is how fast Earth turns in relation to the universe at large. "Sidereal"??? There are multiple Latin words for star. "Sterra" (Old Latin), "sterla" (Old Latin with the "-la" diminutive, hence twinkly little star), "stella" (Classical form derived from "sterla"), "astron" plural "astra" (a Greek word used in Latin), "astrum" plural "astra" (the Greek word partially assimilated) and "sidus" plural "sidera." So "sidereal" and "stellar" are exact synonyms. Source: Casell's Latin Dictionary. Think of it this way. Imagine if Earth did not rotate (and for the sake of the thought problem, imagine that it would still be inhabitable). A particular geographic location would always have the same stars overhead. But as Earth completed a year the Sun would have an apparent motion. Let's say you lived where Orion is overhead on a night. Orion is on the equator. 6 months later when Earth was 180° away in its orbit the sun would be between you and Orion. That is, if Earth did not turn there would still be one solar day a year. So in the real world the spinning of Earth creates a one day discrepancy in the total year. A Mean Solar Day is 1440 minutes long. 1440/365 = 3.9 minutes. There is the difference between the 2 different definitions of "day." Apparently some creationist added a 0 to the 4 minute discrepancy to work it back to Joshua. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Thanks for
an interesting feedback. I am the person who wrote the
earlier response (in
feedback for June 2003) on the legend of NASA computers
finding Joshua's long day.
You present an intriguing speculation, that confusion between solar and sidereal days could have contributed to the development of this legend. No doubt, anyone who is so confused about how computers extrapolate orbits as to give a moments credence to the legend might well make all kinds of strange associations in their mind. However, research into the origins of the story do not show any role for this particular error. The links I gave last time do not go into a huge amount of detail, but essentially the earliest versions of the story date right back to 1890, long before NASA computers were introduced as a variation. Here is another link to someone who has actually managed to track down the 1890 booklet in which the notion was first proposed. See Joshua's Long Day and the NASA Computers by Robert Newman, at the "Interdisciplinary Biblical Research Institute". |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | This is probably the most informative and open-minded source I have yet to see on the subject of evolution. When I first visited the site I was slightly confused as to whether it was meant to promote Creationism or dispel it due to the fact that you do give Creation and I.D. arguments a fair amount of space. With that in mind, it boggles me when people send feedback telling you to 'step off your high pedestal' or '(you) treat Creationists as if they don't know anything'. This is ridiculous. You clearly give creationists and other anti-evolutionists more than enough platform on this site and also by linking to theirs. The only reason it seems like you are mocking or making them look like idiots is the fact that their arguments don't stand up to any serious scrutiny. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | rebecca |
Comment: | Hi I just read the January 2003 pick of the month article about a womans transition from creationism to evolutionism. Something I found interesting was her reasons for believing creationism is not true. She wrote that some of the creationist she read books by or talked to or watched a show by told lies so that creation would work with science. What I found interesting was the fact that she questioned what they said because of what she learned in school, but never questioned( or so it seems) what she learned in school. Just because a teacher or a book teaches something doesn't mean its true. I believe there are many science books also full of lies or half truths to support evolutionism. Just because a scientist says something is true doesn't mean it is. Scientists do profess to believe the truth of the evidence, but they can read the evidence or lack there of to reinforce theire beliefs in evolution when the evidence really points to creationism. I do not think all of evolution theories are wrong. I do think microevolution occurs all the time, I just don't believe in macroevolution. Darwins birds proved microevolution not macro. It also seems to me that there really is no solid proof in macroevolution. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You might consider reviewing the article 29+ Evidences for Macroevolution on our archive. As the title implies, it sets forth more than 29 different lines of evidence that support macroevolution, complete with predicted observations, confirming evidence, and potential falsifications. Macroevolution is far more documented than many other scientific propositions that you or I would take for granted. |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Where to begin? I read through an article on your site entitled "Five Major Misconceptions about Evolution," and I found it to be rather...well...hypocritical. The number of misconseptions in the article about Creationism is amazing. Not to mention logical fallacies populate the page like a plague. For instance, you state that life isn't a closed system, and you would be correct, but of course, Creationism doesn't say that it is. And you cannot argue that the Universe is a closed system. A very large closed system, but none the less a closed system. I also rather liked your inability to distinguish between adaptation and the theory of Evolution. For instance, insects adapt to become immune to pesticides, which could be argued to be a form of evolution, but far from proves the theory of Evolution. Also I found this comment rather interesting, "You must show that the evidence is either wrong or irrelevant or that it fits another theory better. Of course, to do this, you must know both the theory and the evidence." I find that you do not sufficiently grasp the concept of Creationism, and I like how you directly state that Creationism has no scientific proof on it's side...nothing could be further from the truth. Anyway, I've gone on further than I intended, but then again, it couldn't be avoided. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | The reader
appears to misunderstand the point of the Five Major
Misconceptions about Evolution article. The article is
intended to give a brief summary of creationist arguments
that arise time and time again (especially in the talk.origins newsgroup) and a
brief set of reasons why those arguments are misguided.
I can assure the reader on one point, however. The contributors to this Archive have a great deal of familiarity with creationist arguments, many of them having numerous books and pamphlets from creationist sources in their personal libraries. In particular, Mark Isaak, the author of the Five Major Misconceptions about Evolution article, has just completed an extensive classification of creationist claims. Believe me, he's quite familiar with what creationists say. The reader also makes several incorrect assertions. The first is that the universe is a not closed thermodynamic system; as Tim Thompson (I believe) has pointed out before, the universe is expanding and constant size is a precondition for a system to be thermodynamically closed. In any event, the question here is the development of life on Earth; the openness or closedness of the Universe thermodynamically has no bearing on that question. Biologists define evolution as the change in the gene pool of a population of organisms over time, and as such, evolution encompasses adaptation, common descent, and many other observations and models. The reader should examine the following articles: |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | Evolution
philosophy teaches all organisms act selfishly. If this is
true then why do people have pets and love their families?
Science is not a basis for making moral decisions. Only religion teaches right from wrong. |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: | Actually,
evolution is not a philosophy, but the scientific
model underlying modern biology. It does not teach or imply
that organisms act selfishly. It implies (amongst many
other things) that where traits arise within a population
that improve the reproductive success of organisms carrying
those traits, then those traits are likely to become more
common in successive generations. Such traits often include
altruistic and co-operative behaviours.
Evolution thus explains why it is natural for people to place a special importance on their own families. On the other hand, you are quite correct that science is not a basis for making moral decisions. Science is just the process for finding out about the natural world and how it works. It may be natural for people to put their own families first, but that is not a supreme moral imperative. Someone who deliberately subverts the rights of others for the advancement of their own children may be behaving naturally; but they are not behaving morally. It is also, of course, completely false that only religion teaches right from wrong. There have been many great moral and ethical teachers who were not religious. Religion may also teach right from wrong; but in many instances religions have failed badly in their moral standing. |
From: | |
Author of: | Evolution and Philosophy |
Response: | Evolutionary
biology does not teach that all, or even most, organisms
act selfishly. This is a misunderstanding of the book
The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins. It does not,
despite that title, even teach that genes act
selfishly. Genes are stretches of molecules too simple to
act selfishly or altruistically.
The story is this: in the 1950s, a branch of mathematics was formed called "game theory", which was the logic of decision making of ideally rational agents. It was soon discovered that this logic worked pretty well for a range of things that could not be rational agents. For a start, it worked in international disputes, in economics, and, as it turned out, in evolutionary biology. These mythical ideally rational agents were "egoists" (not to be confused with "egotists", who think they are the most important people in the world; eogism is the view that all rational acts must be of direct value to the actor). This is to say, anything that game theory can describe, can be thought of as acting selfishly, coldly calculating their best interests. Why does it work for genes? It turns out that evolution can be treated, as a first approximation, as if genes cared about their long term fitness, and strove to maximise it. Of course they don't; this is an illusion created by the fact that genes that are fitter than other genes do "behave" as if they were rational egoists. But all this amounts to is to say that evolution proceeds in ways that game theory can describe and predict. In fact, these "rational egoist genes" can evolve cooperation in the most unusual cases. A classical book in economics - The Evolution of Cooperation by Robert Axelrod - shows how cooperation between kin and "like-minded strategists" can cause cooperative and altruistic behaviours (at the organism level) to evolve because they increase the fitness of the "selfish" genes. One final point. You are quite correct that statements of fact ("is" statements) can never imply statements of value ("ought" statements). In fact, the origins or causes of something like altruistic behaviour do not make it worthwhile or bad. You can give it the value you want for other reasons no matter whether it is based on religion or on science. I happen to prefer a world full of altruism. It doesn't matter whether the individuals are altruistic because they believe in God or because they believe it is a survival-maximising strategy. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | About
evolution. if simple life forms are inherently more
efficient, then how could life have evolved past the
simplest forms. Like the jump from single celled, self
sufficient organisms, to multicellular organisms. Or from
asexual reproduction to sexual reproduction. Wouldn't
sexual reproduction be incredibly less efficient than
asexual reproduction? And really, what are the chances of a
solar system just spontaneously forming from an explosion?
Has this ever been recreated in experiments by NASA in a
low gravity enviorment? Then let's think about the sea
anenome. Admittedly the sea anenome has no nervous system.
Yet it has different types of cells working in tandem to
produce metabolism. There are cells in the sea anenome that
get nutrients from certain cells, transport and then
deliver those nutrients to other cells. All without a
nervous system. And honestly, how can you explain the
random formation of the sub atomic structure, without
which, none of the rest of the "life" chain would work?
Just because you don't believe in creationism, please don't just spout this evolution stuff out as fact or some "sacred" theory. I mean, really. Think about it. Give me something here. I can't really believe in evolution as the theory is currently being preached by knee-jerk atheists. Thanks. |
Responses | |
From: | |
Response: |
The first rule of responding to antievolution claims is never take an antievolution claim about biology as settled. If they claim the sky is blue, be sure to look out a window before agreeing. In this case, the claim that sea anemones have no nervous system is simply incorrect. They do have a nervous system arranged as a nerve net. There is no brain or central ganglion, but they do have neurons doing their thing. Some jellyfish (jellyfish and sea anemones both being in the same phylum) even have camera eyes and are able to do some image processing. The truth value of evolutionary biology is not affected by who accepts it. Once one starts discounting concepts because pusillanimous people have embraced them, one would have to disavow most of the things taught in our culture, because pusillanimous people are so ubiquitous. Wesley |
From: | |
Response: | Simple life
forms have always dominated life on Earth, but they are not
inherently more efficient in every circumstance.
It is not clear what you mean by efficient. There are advantages that come with sexual reproduction; and life forms have developed which use both sexual and asexual. The solar system did not form from an explosion. It formed as a rotating cloud of dust and gas compressed under its own gravitational field. The full details of the mechanics are complicated and still being investigated; but the accumulation of particles into bodies in orbit about each other is an inevitable consequence of known Newtonian physics; so the probability of solar systems forming is 1. The sea anemone gets along just fine without a central* nervous system. Do you think this means all organisms should similarly have evolved without central nervous systems? But evolution predicts diversity; not uniformity. The word "random" with respect to atomic structure is odd. Atomic physics and chemistry, proceeds according to natural laws which we can study. You may attribute the fundamental laws of nature to God, if you like; science does not address that metaphysical question. But why call it "random"? There are powerful regularities in how things behave, which is why science works at all. Your final paragraph shows the real problem. You instinctively think of scientific study of the natural world — how atoms behave, how interstellar nebulae contract, how life forms diversify — as an atheistic rejection of religious explanations. That is, you are effectively setting up natural explanations for things as meaning that God is not involved. That is a strange principle for someone who believes in a God who is the author and maintainer of all things. You also describe science as a kind of sacred set of unquestioned precepts analogous to the narrow minded religious literalism which underlies creationism. But that is not so. Christians and atheists can equally use the same tools of science to study the natural world. Biological evolution is a scientific model like any other. In fact, evolution stands in relation to biology much as the periodic table stands in relation to chemistry. It is true that many scientists are atheists; and that many contributors to this archive are non-believers. But on the other hand, there are many scientists who are Christians, and some of the major contributors to this archive are Christians. You simply can't tell only by reading their scientific writings; the science and the data is the same in any case. You may have heard the famous phrase Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution. This was by one of the major developers of the "New Synthesis" of evolutionary biology with genetics back in the 1970s: Theodosius Dobzhansky. Dobzhansky is an example of a leading and hugely influential evolutionist who was also a devout Christian. You will never manage to learn about science until you can look at the evidence and the arguments plainly without thinking of it as some atheistic conspiracy. It isn't. (*) I added the word central here thanks to Wesley's observation. |
From: | |
Response: | Thanks for
the reminder, Wesley.
Philip may have meant no central nervous system; which is indeed a feature of the Cnidaria (Hydra, Jellyfish, Anemones); I have amended my original response by including this word. I may have been lax in checking details here because I had in mind the old story about Ciona intestinalis, or "sea squirt" (a tunicate, not an anemone). The larvae of this organism has a simple central nervous system of 330 cells, of which less than 100 are neurons. The larvae swim freely for a couple of days, after which they metamorphose into an adult form, which is a sessile filter feeder permanently fixed in place on some rock. As part of the metamorphosis, most of the nervous system is consumed, since there is no more need for it. Daniel Dennet in Consciousness Explained made the famous observation that this is "rather like getting tenure". I am startled to learn that some Jellyfish have complex eyes, despite lacking a brain. Checking claims is a great idea, including claims from a fellow evolutionist. Your claim checks out. The cubozoan jellyfish Carybdea marsupialis has 24 eyes, 8 of which are complex eyes including a lens. (Refs: [1], [2], [3]) |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | What about the foreward which is in Darwin's "Origins of Species" which basically says that evolution in no way can be proven? Also, you are getting away from the point, it doesn't really matter whether evolution occurred happened, it matters whether there is a God. I choose not to point every inaccuracy on your website but I will say this: shape up or a child will be able to humiliate you with simple things even children understand. Also, have you ever been to an asylum? (no point to anything, just wanting to know) |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | Hmm. When I
read the
introduction to On the Origin of Species, I do
not see any assertion that evolution cannot be proven. To
the contrary, Darwin seems to me to be saying that his
questions about the origin of species and varieties are
difficult ones requiring careful examination of the
evidence, and indeed, further investigation:
I'm not sure whose "point" it is to which the reader is referring, or why there may be only one "point" under consideration. The point of this archive, as its welcome message should make clear, is to set forth for the public the mainstream scientific view on questions of origins, in response to pseudoscientific claims by a variety of individuals and organizations. Overall, this archive takes no position on religious matters, to the extent that assertions about those matters comport with mainstream science. Contributors to this archive hold a variety of religious views, from strong atheism to evangelical Christianity. Certainly, one need not reject God, Christianity, or other faiths to accept evolution, as the article on God and Evolution sets forth. As for the reader's comment about children, perhaps it is time for the reader to relinquish a child-like view of religion, science, and the Universe, and to discover a more adult perspective. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | I have been
conducting a lengthy and largely fruitless debate
concerning evolution with a dedicated creationist. One of
his most amazing arguments against the utility of
radiometric dating is that it has never been used to "match
a known date in history". He excludes C14 dating in this
argument; all the other techniques are of no consequence
because they have never passed this very bizarre test.
I believe there are numerous cases which contradict his assertions, but I am unable to find a clear reference to them. I recall reading that radioactive fallout produced during atmospheric testing was employed as atracer in aquifers and glaciers; I believe radiometric dating of recent cave formations has also been conducted. Dating of recent and historically documented lava flows would also serve. Your input would be most welcome. |
Response | |
From: | Chris Stassen |
Author of: | Isochron Dating |
Response: | An interesting example is: P. R. Renne, W. D. Sharp, A. L. Deino, G. Orsi, and L. Civetta, 1997. "40Ar/39Ar Dating into the Historical Realm: Calibration Against Pliny the Younger," in Science (August 29); vol. 277: pp. 1279-1280. |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | Jeff Polston |
Comment: | The
Institute for Creation Research lists Los Alamos lab
geologist John R. Baumgardner as a believer in a young
earth, of only a few thousand years old. Indeed, there are
several articles by Baumgardner on the site.
But when it comes to his professional life and getting a paycheck, apparently he believes in a very old earth, or according to this article I found, an earth that is at least 150 million years old: Plate subduction clues disappear after 150 million years I wonder how many pieces of silver Baumgardner gets for his work at the Los Alamos Labs? :) |
Feedback Letter | |
From: | |
Comment: | This is a
very interesting website. I am a reformed (recovering)
evangelical Christian myself (my father is a pretty famous
nationally syndicated radio preacher). I am now an
archaeologist working in Africa. It is great that you are
taking the time to explain things so clearly to a broad
audience. This is something I will share with students of
mine who have questions of the same nature that I did when
I was 18 years old.
I have a comment to direct to "Damon" who responded in August which I felt wasn't addressed too well by Wesley. He asks about Mount St. Helens and the inaccuracies of radiocarbon dating of this material. First of all, radiocarbon dating is only good for organic material preserved for 50,000 years, not 100,000 years. I have seen material dated to 60,000 years, but it is dubious at best because the decay is so profound at that point that there is not enough carbon material left to get a meaningful date from. Even mass spectrometry ages are incapable of getting a meaningful estimate prior to 50,000 years ago. Second, all radiocarbon dating is calibrated to AD 1950. Besides being the year that Libby discovered the basics of the method, it is also because after that, the amount of atmospheric carbon in the global atmospheric reservoir skyrockets due to the fact that we have tested so many nuclear weapons. Thus, any sample that died after 1944 (the year that the first atom bomb was exploded) is wildly inaccurate due to the absorption of as much as 100 times the atmospheric carbon (C13) as before that event. Dating any sample would produce wild results because it is impossible to calibrate that much atmospheric variability and could conceivabley register 100s of 1000s years' difference between samples collected that died on the same day. I seriously doubt that anyone who knows anything about radiocarbon dating would waste $400 on testing that theory, because it has been well-known since the 1960s. Also, radiocarbon can only date organic material. Not tephra or volcanic ash. That is well presented in your summaiton of radiocarbon dating, but should be clarified here. Good luck with your site! |
Feedback Letter | |
Comment: | I am responding to the FABNAQ page, question 1b. I was not aware that many Christians are evolutionists. I would like to know where that information came from. I would also like the names of 1,000 professing Christians that are evolutionists, to back up the question's claim. Otherwise there is no good reason for anyone to answer that question, because it is then false by definition, according to logical analysis. |
Response | |
From: | |
Response: | You should get out more; Christianity is bigger than you suppose. See, for example, NCSE's Voices for Evolution: Statements from Religious Organizations. According to polls, approximately 50% of Americans are creationists, and over 90% are Christian. Even the smallest possible overlap gives tens of millions of Christians accepting evolution in the United States. There are certainly many more, probably hundreds of millions, outside the U.S. I'm sure you could find 1000 of them if you looked. |