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Christian Churches Celebrate Darwin's Birthday

Posted by Zonk on Sun Feb 12, 2006 06:19 PM
from the we-love-you-unca-darwin dept.
kthejoker writes "Today is the 197th anniversary of the great biologist Charles Darwin's birth. In response, some 450 Christian churches are celebrating Darwin's birth, saying, 'Darwin`s theory of biological evolution is compatible with faith and that Christians have no need to choose between religion and science.' There's also an interesting perspective on Darwinism and Christianity in the San Jose Mercury News."
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  • This somehow reminds me of a man going to the Doctor's office:

    Doc: Well, I'm afraid you have tuberculosis. I need to know, are you a creationist?
    Patient: What does that have to do with anything?
    D: Well, I could give you the drugs that would cure Tuberculosis as it was discovered in 1937, or the modern drugs that treat the disease as it has evolved into today.
    P: What's so great about the modern drugs?
    D: They're intelligently designed...
    • Re:Doonesbury? (Score:5, Informative)

      by tomee (792877) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:02PM (#14702028)
      Here's the link [doonesbury.com]. I loved that one.
    • by teslar (706653) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:37PM (#14702217)
      This in turn reminds me of a French comic strip I saw years ago somewhere... I tried googling, but couldn't find it... anyway, it had three frames and went like this:

      1st frame: A guy is giving a presentation to the reader, with a slide projector screen behind him. He says: "God created Man in His image."

      2nd frame: shows the picture of a caveman

      3rd frame: Guy says "then man evolved. As for God, we don't know."

      I liked it a lot :)
  • by countach (534280) on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:31PM (#14701877)
    • by copponex (13876) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:10PM (#14702078) Homepage
      Can a man live inside of a fish for three days? Was Eve fashioned out of Adam's rib?

      If you say something to yourself similar to, "Obviously that part was allegory," then you have no leg to stand on. Either every single thing in it is literal (and the earth has four corners) or everything must be interpreted. Once everything must be interpreted, you cannot claim any sort of non-relativism.

      Now, ask yourself these questions: Which bible do you read, and why? Do you think the Romans (who cannonized the Bible with their selected bishops in 313) were answering the call of God or politics? Why do you go to church on Sunday instead of the Sabbath, or Saturday? Why do most of the Christian holidays coincide exactly with pagan holidays that are centuries older?

      If you're a Trinitarian, are non-trinitarians going to hell? What if you aren't baptised? Why do you think there are so many sects of Christianity if the bible is so crystal clear?
      • by CyricZ (887944) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:21PM (#14702142)
        Can a man live inside of a fish for three days? Was Eve fashioned out of Adam's rib?

        Those sound like the kinds of questions that Adam and Jamie, the Mythbusters, need to be called in to answer!

      • If you say something to yourself similar to, "Obviously that part was allegory," then you have no leg to stand on. Either every single thing in it is literal (and the earth has four corners) or everything must be interpreted. Once everything must be interpreted, you cannot claim any sort of non-relativism.

        That's ridiculous! The Bible comes from a large number authors all who were in different time periods and different cultural contexts. And often we don't have the full context available to us.

        For instance the story of Jonah is believed by biblical scholors to be a story that was told as an allegory. One of the reasons is because there's no other evidence that such a man even existed. The creation story is similar, there were no witnesses to the event, a primative culture with no modern scientific background drew upon existing stories to create their own. Notice that the creation stories of several civilizations at the time are very similar.

        The Bible is first and foremost a guide on how to have a relationship with God and those parts are pretty clear IMHO. That's where the absolutes lie.

        Which bible do you read, and why?

        Any Bible that was translated from the original Greek and Hebrew which, believe it or not (for the "the Bible's been redone dozens of times!" camp) is most translations.

        Do you think the Romans (who cannonized the Bible with their selected bishops in 313) were answering the call of God or politics?

        I'm sure it was probably both.

        Why do you go to church on Sunday instead of the Sabbath, or Saturday? Why do most of the Christian holidays coincide exactly with pagan holidays that are centuries older?

        Same answer for both, they were Pagan traditions originally and used by the Catholic church. I've never really understood why in this day and time it even matters.

        If you're a Trinitarian, are non-trinitarians going to hell? What if you aren't baptised?

        Well I've read the Bible several times and I've never seen where it says non-trinitarians or people who aren't baptised are going to hell.

        Why do you think there are so many sects of Christianity if the bible is so crystal clear?

        I think there are lots of reasons, the rebellion against corruption, the twisting of scripture to gain power, just the ability to nit-pick. Ultimately religions are made up of people and people are far from perfect.
  • by Sky Cry (872584) on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:33PM (#14701881)

    One could always believe that evolution is just a tool in God's hands. That way it's possible to believe in intelligent design without denying facts, that Earth is older than a few thousands years, etc.

    Religion is about believing, science is about knowing. They are not mutually exclusive.

  • 'Bout Time... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Vorondil28 (864578) <goodjearb@@@gmail...com> on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:35PM (#14701894) Homepage Journal
    I'm glad to see there's some people out there that don't think religion and science are mutually exclusive ways of looking at the world. To each his own, but IHMO, both religion and science have productive places in society.

    After all, a true person of faith would encourage science because it will only prove what he/she already believes to be true, right?
  • by plunge (27239) on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:36PM (#14701902)
    Many people don't really know anything about who he was or what he thought or how it applies to modern biology.

    The guy was:
    1) A careful and thoughtful scientist who spent countless hours studying tihngs most people would find incrediby boring. Darwin spent EIGHT YEARS studying BARNACLES.
    2) Fairly shy.
    3) A Christian for most of his life, and only an agnostic in later life (which had more to do historically with death in the family than with evolution, just ike Lincoln's rediscovering of Christianity)

    The guy is/was NOT:
    1) a guy who's ideas are a dogma. What Darwin thought is historically important in the development of evolution, but has no bearing on what and where that theory will lead.
    2) 100% right about a LOT of things. He not only got the patterns of heredity completely wrong (he thought it was analog: by trait blending, when it was really digital), but was embarassingly forced to admit it when people with better arguments pointed out that blending was in contradiction with the evidence.
    3) Someone that thought fossils had proved his case. To Darwin, fossils showed mainly the fact that past life was very different from present life: hence that most of species that existed in the past no longer existed in his day. This was one of the chief inspirations for his idea. The current creationist obsession with fossils overlooks the fact that Darwin put forward his theory, and was considered to be correct, long before we had anything like the fantastically rich fossil record of today. Darwin predicted that future fossils would all confirm his theory, but he NEVER expected that we'd find anywhere as many as we have, or that an entirely unimaginable field (genetics) would someday come to exist and provide an indepedent second check on the fossil record, allowing us to figure out actual lineages.

    Darwin also didn't propose that the origins of life were part of evolution. The most he ever said on the subject was that maybe life had started in some warm little pool somewhere... in a private letter. He didn't publish this idea as scientific work.

    There are so many misconceptions about the man that this otherwise fairly reserved guy is just buried under layers of legend. He was neither an exceptional genius and phropet, nor was he arrogant, careless about jumping to conclusions, or an atheist. He was a bright, studious man who worked hard, amassed tons of evidence, and hit upon a stunningly innovative realization about how evolution could have occured (one which was as much due to the new discoveries in geology and biology of his time as to his own thinking: as is obvious from the fact that no one in the history of earth had thought of it before... and then suddenly two guys did indepedently around the same time). He's worth remembering and learning about, not worshiping or demonizing.
  • As a christian... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by SisyphusShrugged (728028) on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:39PM (#14701921) Homepage
    I am a christian and a scientist, one who does not find the belief in a cunctipotent deity incompatible with understanding and accepting scientific discoveries, To tell the truth more I learn about cosmology (singularities, string theory, the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principal, and other crazy ideas) and evolution the more my belief in God is reinforced. To me the individuals who hinder scientific progress in the name of God are reserving a place for themselves in the afterlife (by which I mean, a not very nice one! or maybe they will come back as a worm in the next life!)
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:43PM (#14701950)
    "Christians have no need to choose between religion and science."

    I beg to differ. The premise of religion is to accept that certain things are mysterious and cannot be investigated, or that certain things are true whether there is evidence for them or not.

    The premise of science is that everything should be investigated, and that things are accepted as generally true only after evidence emerges for them, and that new evidence can change our perceptions of what is true.

    • by Bacon Bits (926911) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:47PM (#14702267)
      True enough, but it is obvious that science has limitations.

      1. Science can only be reasonably applied the things that can be observed.
      2. Science can only be meaningfully applied to things that can be measured and repeated.
      3. Science can only be absolutely applied to things that can be understood by humans.

      To presume that all knowledge and all truth must necessarily be confined by the above set of restrictions is ludicrous. And, of course, completely unprovable. If you honestly believe that science and humanity are capable of understanding and knowing everything, then you have trapped yourself by faith in science. That is, welcome to your pseudoreligion.

      Ultimately, science is all about answers. Religion is all about questions.
    • The premise of science is that everything should be investigated

      And therefore, we have the science called Theology [wikipedia.org], whose subject of study is God.
  • Finally, some sense! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Aphrika (756248) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:00PM (#14702016)
    As a Christian, and someone who's interested in science, how things work, biology and the like, I've never really had a problem with evolution and religion conflicting with each other. Equally, almost all other Christians I've met - and a lot of them are scientists or engineers, people that deal with fact - have likeminded views. In a lot of cases, many of us are baffled as to how this viewpoint that evolution is just 'wrong' came about.

    It's nice to see people giving the issue some thought and prving that we're not all religious crackpots. I certainly don't believe the Bible to be 100% literal in its explanation of things to us. While my faith tells me that my God is a powerful force, I'm pretty sure that using the notion of 7 days of creation was a mechanism to get the idea across to people of that time. Do you really think people thousands of years ago would be able to grasp the notion of evolution? The book of Genesis would certainly be a few chapters longer...

    The important point here though is that evolution is not creation. Both can co-exist quite happily.
  • This is Idolatry (Score:4, Informative)

    by Eli Gottlieb (917758) <eligottlieb@NOSpam.gmail.com> on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:53PM (#14702295) Homepage Journal
    I would just like to remind those out there who still believe in an Abrahamic faith that having your church/synagogue/mosque celebrate the birthday of a human being not associated in any way with God is idolatry. Darwin is not a religious figure, he is a scientific one. You can believe in evolution and be religious, however.

    I would also like to remind the people who wrote my Biology textbook, a Miller and Levine of Prentice Hall, that their treatment of Darwin and evolution is rather idolotrous. Details of earlier theories (inheritance of learned traits, geological theories that led to "Earth is billions of years old" in the first place, Darwin's actual evidence) are left out, and the authors practically declare Undying Love for Charles Darwin. Declaring Undying Love for anything is unscientific.

    This has been a public service announcement because idolizing people causes problems, such as reading the National Enquirer, stupidity and electing the stupid "National Enquirer" readers you idolize to high political office.
  • by femto (459605) on Sunday February 12 2006, @09:57PM (#14702959) Homepage
    People may be interested in the following opinion piece:

    How design supporters insult God's intelligence [smh.com.au]

    and the following documentary about some priests who are also hard core scientists:

    Galileo's Sons [bullfrogfilms.com]

    A few days ago the Pope came out and reinforced the Catholic Church's view that Science and religion are compatible. [msn.com] In other words even the Pope thinks evolution is valid. Here is the original speech in Italian. [vatican.va]

    All in all the proponents of intelligent design are looking more and more like the snake oil salesmen they are.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:34PM (#14701886)
      How about the idiots who, for example, think Bush is comparable to Hitler?

      Of course he's "comparable" to Hitler: It is possible to compare Bush to Hitler: Bush is immensely less charismatic, competent or intelligent than Hitler.

      Brought to you by the British campaign to eliminate idiotic American misuse of the word "comparable".

        • by jschottm (317343) on Monday February 13 2006, @12:32AM (#14703634)
          Comparison deals with similar traits.

          Dictionary.com's definitions [reference.com]

          Note the second definition:

          To examine in order to note the similarities or differences of.

          Note the usage notes, which state that the preposition "to" is generally indicates that compare is being used to highlight differences between the two (or more) things, while "with" is usually used to indicate similar traits. Note that the origional post stated:

          How about the idiots who, for example, think Bush is comparable to Hitler?

          Also, recall that a rather famous playwright and poet once asked,

          Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?

          Clearly, the intent is to compare a human being with a temporal event, things that don't share precisely similar traits.
    • by CyricZ (887944) on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:46PM (#14701962)
      Some of the most vocal opponents of the current American regime are those who actually fought in World War II, Korea, Vietnam, and other conflicts. They know the true horrors of war, and many of them know the actual smell of fascism. You can call them idiots of you want. However, I'll listen to them when they start putting out warnings.

      You speak of discussing events one did not witness. Just like that man and his children may not have witnessed macroevolution, I take it you did not witness World War II. While I was young at the time, I did. I remember leaving London during the Blitz. It is hypocritical and ignorant for you to suggest that those who experienced it firsthand are incorrect when they correctly point out history repeating itself.

                    • by dangitman (862676) on Monday February 13 2006, @12:47AM (#14703688)
                      1. Al Qaeda is not from Iraq. In fact, Al Qaeda is probably a creation of the US, whose actual existence has been exaggerated.

                      2. Normal Iraqi people are not members of Al Qaeda. But they are the people being detained.

                      3. The idea of a "war" against such an amorphous and vague group is ridiculous. They should be targets of law enforcement. War is about nation-states and armies fighting one another. "War on Terror" is a misnomer.

                      4. If we are at war with Al Qaeda, then why doesn't the US treat them by Geneva conventions, and other standards for treating POWs? But the administration has denied that they are prisoners of war - they are "enemy combatants" - therefore, there must be no war, if they are not POWs.

                    • by dangitman (862676) on Monday February 13 2006, @03:43AM (#14704351)
                      Al Qaeda is a world-wide organization with a presence in Iraq.

                      What evidence do you have of their presence in Iraq?

                      They hide among the population which is turning against them. Ordinary people are turning them in.

                      So, why are ordinary Iraqis being imprisoned and tortured, even if they have nothing to do with Al Qaeda or terrorism? If we are at war with Al Qaeda, saying that we should imprison Iraqis (without rights or trial) is like saying that the French should be imprisoned in WWII, because we were at war with the Nazis.

                      War on Terror is shorthand, not misnomer.

                      We also have a War on Drugs. Does that mean that drug users should be denied constitutional or international law rights? If it counts as war, why aren't they treated as POWs?

                      In order to qualify for the protections of a Prisoner of War under the Geneva Conventions you must meet certain standards. Al Qaeda and company violate the standards and therefore don't qualify for the protections and priviledges.

                      Please explain this. If they are not enemies in a war, then they are civilians, and deserve civilian protections. If they are enemies in a war, then they should be treated as POWs. There is no third category recognized under US or international law.

                      War on Al Qaeda is about the same as war on pirates in centuries past, or various guerilla groups. Nothing silly about it at all.

                      Well, under US law and international law, pirates, guerillas, and war criminals are granted criminal trials if captured.

                      Faulty logic, and quite silly.

                      Why is it silly?

                      Might I suggest that you actually read the Geneva Conventions?

                      Yes, I have. Might I suggest you actually explain what you mean? Where is it in the Geneva convention that allows anyone to be treated the way the US is treating prisoners? You don't actually present a logical argument. You just say "this is silly" and don't explain why.

                      Aside from the Geneva conventions, what about the conventions against torture? What about George Bush saying "The US does not torture"?

                    • by Politburo (640618) on Monday February 13 2006, @09:43AM (#14705658)
                      Might I suggest that you actually read the Geneva Conventions?

                      That would only prove you even more wrong. Geneva says that signatories should follow the rules, even if the enemy isn't. In fact, it's Article I, "The High Contracting Parties undertake to respect and to ensure respect for the present Convention in all circumstances." Emph. mine.

                      And Article II: "Although one of the Powers in conflict may not be a party to the present Convention, the Powers who are parties thereto shall remain bound by it in their mutual relations."

                      And let's look at Article V: "Should any doubt arise as to whether persons, having committed a belligerent act and having fallen into the hands of the enemy, belong to any of the categories enumerated in Article 4 [POWs], such persons shall enjoy the protection of the present Convention until such time as their status has been determined by a competent tribunal."

                      While you can use slippery lawyer talk to try and get al qaeda members out of the POW definitions in Article 4, it simply isn't a logical argument, and it is completely bereft of any moral standing. You want so badly for this to be a "WAR", but then you want to throw away the protections that we've agreed to for the treatment of prisoners of war, because.. oh.. uh.. they're not prisoners.. or something.
    • by Eightyford (893696) on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:48PM (#14701968) Homepage
      Is that what he really wants to be teaching the kids? To doubt what they can't see for themselves?

      Actually, yes. We schould teach our children to doubt and question absolutely everything. To me, the need for a continuous search for answers is one of the greatest attributes a person can have.
      • Actually, yes. We schould teach our children to doubt and question absolutely everything. To me, the need for a continuous search for answers is one of the greatest attributes a person can have.

        I think such absolute skepticism is impossible to maintain in the face of how much there is in the world to understand. Very few people are in any position to vouch for the authenticity of much of the scientific experimentation that goes on. Another great attribute of humanity is the ability to pool a mass of knowledge much greater than any one individual could possibly hope to grasp on their own.
        • by radtea (464814) on Sunday February 12 2006, @09:30PM (#14702837)
          I think such absolute skepticism is impossible to maintain in the face of how much there is in the world to understand.

          The general principle should be not "to doubt and question everything", but to be willing to doubt and question anything.

          It is simply silly to actually doubt and question everything. It would be a huge and pointless mental burden.

          But the willingness to question anything seems to me to be an essential attribute of a civilized, rational person. I know damned well I don't have all the answers, but it seems to me insane to suggest that there are some questions that ought not to be asked.

          The opposite of this view is religion. All religions place some questions beyond the pale. Christians are not allowed to question the divinity of Jesus. Jews are not allowed to question their special relationship with God. Muslims are not allowed to question the unity of God. None of them are allowed to question the existence of God in the form of any serious doubt.

          This kind of willful epistemological blindness will always be opposed to science, which holds that we should be willing to ask any meaningful question.
          • by Cl1mh4224rd (265427) on Sunday February 12 2006, @09:05PM (#14702695)
            No, it's not impossible to maintain, and I'm of the opinion that no amount of skepticism is enough.
            Absolute skepticism is arrogance, or at least an utter lack of trust in the experiences and knowledge of others.

            You hear something from a friend, but you're skeptical, so you go look it up. You find ten other people that agree with what your friend said, but you're skeptical of them. Where does it end?

            When people say absolute skepticism is impossible to maintain, they're not lying; it is impossible. Eventually you have to give in to trust.
      • by zootm (850416) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:53PM (#14702289)

        Actually, yes. We schould teach our children to doubt and question absolutely everything.

        Agreed — the thing is, though, that arguing against science with religion doesn't work on a rational level. Religion is a belief, the questions that can be asked of it are distinct to those of science — this debate gets messy because people are pitting two disparate systems against one another. Science does not aim to disprove religion, so arguing against religion with science doesn't work (except with extremely anal literal interpretations, where the parts that are decided are fairly mundane). Religion does not aim to prove itself, being based on faith, so arguing against science with it leads to problems from their contrasting bases.

        • and... *GULP* (Score:4, Insightful)

          by xant (99438) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:37PM (#14702212) Homepage
          They probably have never seen *god* either; a rational response to this argument would be to disbelieve both evolution and creationism and all religion, to go live in a cave and eat berries and reject the notion of all civilization, including its mythology.

          The logical outcome of his argument doesn't matter though. This stuff works on children only because children haven't been taught critical thinking; they've been taught to listen to authority. (Then it continues to work because adults haven't been taught critical thinking either.) And that's exactly what this guy wants. The specific argument doesn't matter. The only thing that matters is that someone in a position of authority said it, and the people who believe it don't have the tools to defend themselves from authoritative statements.
    • by TallMatthew (919136) on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:49PM (#14701975)
      Evolution leading to complex organisms is at least tricky to understand . How about the idiots who, for example, think Bush is comparable to Hitler? That's just as stupid as not believing in evolution, or believing the earth is flat, or whatever. We're surrounded every day by idiots who believe in bizarre things

      I believe that Bush is comparable to Hitler, evolution is still an iffy theory (though creationism is ludicrous), the world isn't flat and that you are, quite clearly, an idiot.

      How's that for bizarre?

    • by rjshields (719665) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:01PM (#14702022)
      We're surrounded every day by idiots ... I drive an SUV
      Point well made :-)
            • by scotch (102596) on Sunday February 12 2006, @11:59PM (#14703515) Homepage
              It's sort of like the fact that The Truth is that recycling paper uses more energy and creates more pollution than harvesting virgin trees and using them for paper.

              Where did you get your info about recycling paper? A quick google turned up this:

              Recycling paper saves energy, water, space at landfills, and disposal fees. The paper industry saves about 20 percent of the energy required to make paper and paperboard from fresh lumber. Recycling paper also saves about 50 percent of the water required to produce paper from fresh lumber and alleviates the shortage of space at landfills. When waste paper is recycled instead of buried, each ton of waste paper saves the charge to municipalities for dumping, often called the tipping fee.
              -- https://energy.navy.mil/awareness/365newfacts/365e wfacts10.html [navy.mil]

              though of course I'm not an expert - your claim about recycled paper just sounds like one of those myths going around that have no basis in fact. References?

    • by JanneM (7445) on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:43PM (#14701948) Homepage
      I'm not a christian, but I'm glad there's some active stance among religious people against the fundamentalists who seem to have taken over any kind of discussion of religion in this country.

      I'm not religious, and I find, on the whole, that fundamentalists hijacking a religion can be a good thing in the long run. Probably nothing else could turn as many people away from the whole idea of religion so much as a generation of frothing-at-the-mouth zealots fighting each other and anyone disagreeing with their inflexible, warped view of the world.
    • Re:Meanwhile... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Stephan Schulz (948) <schulz@informatik.tu-muenchen.de> on Sunday February 12 2006, @06:51PM (#14701983) Homepage
      When are we going to put our foot down on this Muslim scourge?
      Well, there are roughly one billion Muslims quitely going along and living there lives. Maybe a few thousand are rioting, and no doubt quite a few are real assholes about this issue. But to condem the whole faith for the acts of a few is both stupid and unproductive. Islam is not sigificantly better or worse than "Christianity" (and about as diverse).
      • Re:Meanwhile... (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Expert Determination (950523) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:02PM (#14702029)
        This whole "it's only a few thousand rioting" business doesn't hold much water. Hamas, ie. a bunch of terrorists, have just been voted in democratically in Palestine. Ahmadinejad was voted in democratically in Iran. Extremist Islamic view represent popular opinion across the Middle East and are not solely the beliefs of a minority.
    • by hunterx11 (778171) <hunterx11@gmai l . c om> on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:03PM (#14702035) Homepage Journal
      Because in order to discredit evolutionary theory, those who oppose it attempt to undermine science, reason, and even empirical observation as bases of belief. The heliocentric model of the solar system isn't all of science, either, but no one who honestly believes in science disbelieves it.
        • by hunterx11 (778171) <hunterx11@gmai l . c om> on Sunday February 12 2006, @08:47PM (#14702601) Homepage Journal
          Scientists don't support Darwin; they support evolutionary theory. In fact, Darwin's idea that evolution is gradual has been largely replaced by punctuated equilibria based on evidence. Scientists don't simply look for things to reinforce existing theory, but instead they seek to expand and revise it constantly. This is the sort of thing creationists don't want; they start from a given premise and discard all evidence that doesn't agree with it. You basically took an argument against creationism, replaced the word "creationist" with "scientist", and expect people to lend credence to your nonsense because you admit to uncertainty.
        • by Coryoth (254751) on Monday February 13 2006, @12:40AM (#14703663) Homepage Journal
          I know that humans were just the design we ended up with, not the goal,
          but.. think in terms of the creation of a creature as much more "fit" [from evolutionary perspsective] as a human to an ape.


          I think the real question is "more 'fit' for what?", and until we have some semblance of an answer to that I think your concerns are awfully speculative. We really have no idea of what pressures or constraints led to humans developing. In contrast your example of and F16 from a Sopwith Camel there are some very well defined implicit constraints and specifications as to purpose and what constitutes "fitness" in this case. What led to humans may have been some fairly loose and easily satsified constraints with some of the particulars that we take for "fitness" simply being aberrations where the process spun on in an unconstrained direction.

          Could evolutionary algorithms solve the Sopwith Camel to F16 problem in the required time? Maybe not. Evolution/Life doesn't always manage to solve the problems with which it is presented, particularly when the constraints are excessive. History is littered with examples of evolution failing to develop a satisfactory solution in time: it's called extinction. So even if humans are a remarkable solution to an incredibly difficult problem it may well be that we are just one of those few cases where an answer did turn up in the requisite time out of millions more cases where it didn't.

          Jedidiah.
    • by MillionthMonkey (240664) on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:03PM (#14702040)
      Why is it that if you are against Darwin you are against science?

      Well, of course in principle it doesn't automatically mean that.

      However, evolution is one of the most well-established theories that science has to offer. It is supported by evidence extremely well and is validated by hundreds of new observations every day. And if you publicly come out against it and in favor of some alternative theory for which the only evidence is a religious text, chances are pretty damn good that you are incapable of holding a logical thought in your head to begin with.

      Now maybe that's an unfair assessment to make about you, but to make a more accurate one requires too much time and energy to expend on every evolution-basher out there. Life is too short, and there are too many of them (especially in the United States of America) to interview every single one as to his feelings about science in general. And it's a simple fact that people who publicly oppose evolution tend to be quite vocal in not only bashing scientists as a group, but bashing science in general as an inferior source of knowledge as compared to religion- an apples to oranges comparison if there ever was one.

      If I were some omniscient being with all the time and resources in the world to examine the innermost thoughts of every creationist and intelligent designer, perhaps I'd be able to develop a more accurate opinion. As a human being with limited years on this earth, please forgive me if I take a short cut and make what is a pretty accurate generalization to save time. If you are against Darwin, you are probably against science. You may think you're pro-science, but usually what that means is that you're pro-technology and view your toys as validation of the superiority of your culture and by extension the correctness of its religious views. Individuals opposed to Darwinism on the merits of the theory itself (and who may offer alternative theories equally unpalatable from religious viewpoints) are actually quite rare.
        • by Daniel Dvorkin (106857) * on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:57PM (#14702323) Homepage Journal
          There are plenty observations made "each day" that contradict evolutionary theories.

          Name some. Before you post, please check talk.origins and the NCSE website to see debunkings of your claims; I can almost guarantee that any of the observations you're thinking of do not contradict evolution in the slightest, and have already been explained in short, simple sentences and words of few syllables so that even creationists can understand them.

          There are also many established scientists who don't support it too.

          No, there aren't. There are very, very few, and almost none of them are biologists. And their arguments are the same easily debunked nonsense, repeated over and over in increasingly obfuscatory language; they haven't brought anything new to the table in decades.

          The theory of evolution is an attempt to find an absolute in a relativistic universe, it doesn't exist. It is based off age-old beliefs in simple cause and effect, and projecting those flawed beliefs over the span of millions of years. The universe does not operate this way. With our modern knowledge of relativism and quantum mechanics, evolution should be debunked.

          Congratulations, you've managed to combine two of the most common types pseudo-scientific quackery (creationism and profound misinterpretation of quantum physics) into a single post! I suggest you stick to fare like "What the Bleep Do We Know?" -- it should be more at your level.
        • by rumblin'rabbit (711865) on Sunday February 12 2006, @08:36PM (#14702543) Journal

          You seem to confuse testability with repeatability. Testability here is the ability for observation to support or refute a theory, not the ability to reproduce experiments in a laboratory. That is to say, a proper scientific hypothesis must be answerable to the facts. Repeatability is not, however, a requirement of all the sciences.

          By your argument, astronomy and the rest of biology are not science either. And yet patently they are.

          Darwin did not therorize about the origins of life, only the origin of species. The origins of life is not normally considered part of evolutionary theory.

          Regarding the other two examples, evolutionly theory does not claim to be able to explain how every evolutionary occurence throughout time took place in minute detail. You state that it is nonscientific because we have an incomplete understanding of what happened two billion years ago? Ridiculous.

        • by Dimensio (311070) <<darkstar> <at> <iglou.com>> on Sunday February 12 2006, @08:40PM (#14702563)
          Let me remind you that as widely-known and understood as evolution is, even Darwin himself admitted that the theory could be debunked if it could be proven that a system could not exist in an "intermediate" state such as that which evolution requires:

          And thus far no such system has been observed. All theories are potentially falsifiable -- an explanation that has no falsification criteria is not scientific. Evolution stands strong for many reasons, including the total failure of any potential falsifying observations to come about despite ample opportunity.
    • Re:Totally wrong (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Spy der Mann (805235) <spydermann,slashdot&gmail,com> on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:46PM (#14702260) Homepage Journal
      Christian (and Islamic and Judaeic) dogma inevitably and logically results in fundamentalism and rejection of all secular (ie, rational) thought and belief. To think otherwise is to ignore the very scripture one claims to believe in.

      How funny, the papal Encyclica "Fides et Ratio" says otherwise.
      I think your friend Harris is misunderstanding at least one point of christianity.
    • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Funny)

      by Spy der Mann (805235) <spydermann,slashdot&gmail,com> on Sunday February 12 2006, @07:55PM (#14702302) Homepage Journal
      Churches...churches where a Bible is actually *used* will not take this position.

      I think you misspelled "abused". :)
    • Re:WTF? (Score:5, Informative)

      by CrankyOldBastard (945508) on Sunday February 12 2006, @08:37PM (#14702548)
      Even today, Darwin's attempt to explain the origins of man aren't very accurate with his book, Origins_of_Species. I assume you've never actually read the book, because Darwin doesnt address the origins of Man in The Origin of Species. He does point out the morphological similarities between Man and the higher apes.

      If you want to read Darwin's ideas about Human Evolution then you should read "The Descent of Man" where he demonstrates that sexual selectiona nd the competition that entials are sufficient to account for Human diversity as observed 2 centuries ago.

      I have to stress that at no pont in Darwin's writings did he address the question of the Origin of Life. 1. Everywhere in nature, the double helix DNA works the same way. To mate, animals must have the same number of 'rungs'. But man has 46, and ape has 48; humans have #2 & #3 bonded together. Nowhere else in nature are rungs "bonded" like this. We're just not the same, but we appear similar, visually.

      No, there is no such requirement in order to mate. There are any number of websites that demonstrate mating between different species. To mate and have functional and fertile progeny, that's another thing however. I'd like to point out that as you said, Humans have 2 chromosomes from apes bonded together, which is simply a transcription modification.... I assume that God can allow the telomeres to unfold differently if He wishes?

      And regarding your points about ID, well, in the opinion of myself, and many of the memebrs of our Church, ID is one of the greatest threats to Christianity in many many years. ID requires that God be an imperfect being, that creation be imperfect and that he makes mistakes. My God does not make mistakes, therefore ID did not happen.

      Finally I'd like to refer you to St Augustine, who made the point that when experience and scripture seem to be in conflict, it's always that we have mis-interpreted scripture.

          • Well, at a certain point you have to start addressing the problem. I think we're at that point.

            Well put.

            The notion that you can just ignore these nutjobs can lead to even bigger problems down the road. It is when average, everyday people fail allow spurious debates to take hold that the majority becomes hostage to a dimwitted but aggressive minority. Hostility to intellectualism has been with America since its founding, but when it becomes so pervasive that the nonsensical hurling of insults becomes a substitute for debate, the reasonable majority loses its ability to influence politics. I think we've already entered a very dangerous era, where style (angry rhetoric, appeals to symbology, character assassination) has far outstripped substance in the arena of public debate.

            When is the last time you saw two people on television actually debate an idea for a full 40 minutes? I'm talking about locking intellectual horns and attempting to prove the merits of an idea to an audience through skillfully argued logic. No dodging the question, no shoehorning a question into a pre-generated answer. I think such debates are non-existent now because we have allowed them to become extinct. We allow the issues to be turned into lowest common denominator mudwrestling that shows how little we respect ourselves as citizens. We have not demanded a better process, one that pushes better ideas to the fore. So we wind up with a process that is driven by one liners and photos of politicians going duck hunting.