The Darwinian Revolution: Science Red in Tooth and Claw 514
The Darwinian Revolution: Science Red in Tooth and Claw | |
author | Michael Ruse |
pages | xiv + 346 |
publisher | The University of Chicago Press |
rating | 7 |
reviewer | Anthony Campbell |
ISBN | 0226731693 |
summary | Darwin's ideas did not emerge from a vacuum; there were important forerunners. Ruse provides a valuable insight into the intellectual climate of the time. He makes it clear that to think of science and religion as being mutually opposed in the nineteenth century is an over-simplification; there were important ways in which religion actually helped the cause of science. |
Ruse is particularly good on the personalities of those involved. They were indeed a colourful bunch. They included William Whewell, Adam Sedgwick, Baden Powell (father of the founder of the Scout movement), John FW Herschel (son of the famous astronomer William Herschel), Charles Lyell, Richard Owen, and Charles Babbage, better known for his invention of the calculating engine, as well as Charles Darwin and Thomas Henry Huxley. Many of these, especially those belonging to the older generation, were clergymen; it was impossible to be a Fellow of a college at Oxford or Cambridge at the time unless one was in Holy Orders. This inevitably coloured their views on evolution, though not always in the way one might expect.
Popular accounts of the debate about evolutionary thought in the nineteenth century often convey the impression of a straightforward conflict between secularism and religion, in which scientific secularism emerged triumphant. As Ruse makes clear, this is a considerable over-simplification: the relation between religion and science was in fact very complex, and in some ways religion actually helped the cause of science. Other factors, philosophical and social, were also involved, and Ruse's claim is that all of these elements have to be given due weight if the development of evolutionism is to be understood.
That profound changes in intellectual attitudes occurred in the nineteenth century there can be no doubt. In 1844, when Robert Chambers published his "Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation", in which he argued the case for organic evolution, hardly any serious scientists accepted its main message, but when Charles Darwin published "The Origin" in 1859 his main claim was quickly accepted by almost all scientists concerned with the origin of organisms. In part, this was a consequence of the difference in the scientific standing of the two authors, but there were other reasons as well and it is these that Ruse seeks to elucidate.
First, there were scientific reasons to accept evolution. It made sense of the geographical distribution of species, such as finches and tortoises on the Galapagos Islands, which Darwin described and which was hard to explain on any other assumption. Also, by the 1860s more was known about the fossil record than had been known in 1844, and it was becoming increasingly difficult to doubt that progression had occurred during geological time. Darwin was therefore able to draw on a more ample arsenal of scientific facts; indeed, he had made significant contributions to that arsenal himself.
Of course, Darwin was not merely advocating evolution as a process, he put forward a mechanism by which it could occur. Chambers had not provided a plausible cause for evolution, but Darwin did, with his mechanism of natural selection. However, this idea had its problems: estimates of the age of the earth seemed not to allow enough time for evolution, and many people doubted if natural selection could be powerful enough to produce new species as opposed to mere variations. Even T.H.Huxley, "Darwin's bulldog", was relatively uninterested in natural selection and tended to downplay its importance. But field naturalists such as Henry Walter Bates found it invaluable as an explanation for insect mimicry and his work was cited by Darwin in later issues of "The Origin".
The second area of change was in philosophy. Many of the older scientists were idealists, Platonists, who favoured the view that species were immutable Types. Huxley, on the other hand, was not a Platonist and criticized his older colleagues on that ground. This change was both a cause and a consequence of other changes, in religious thought and in society at large, that were occurring at this time. Ruse points to innovations in the educational system leading to a reduced emphasis on the Classics and a weakening in the influence of religion. Not surprisingly in view of his professional background, Ruse pays considerable attention to the philosophical principles espoused by the main participants in the debate. There was a prevailing assumption, to which Darwin himself largely subscribed, that physics, and especially astronomy, provided the explanatory model to which other sciences ought to aspire.
The third class of change affected religion. Chambers had been attacked on religious grounds: he was held to have threatened the special position of man and to have left no room for God's design. Similar criticisms were made of Darwin but less strongly. However, religion, Ruse believes, also helped Darwinism. The argument from design prepared people's minds for evolutionism, while thinkers such as Baden Powell thought of God as working through unbroken natural laws rather than through miracles.
In the 1830s and 1840s religion was a thorny problem for many people. Partly this was a reaction to science; Ruse thinks that the attempt to reconcile science and revelation was a particularly British preoccupation (as perhaps it still is). And conventional religion was also under threat from another source: German Biblical criticism. As a result, some prominent clergymen, including Lyell, had moved a long way towards Deism (natural as opposed to revealed religion).
Lyell is a particularly interesting figure in the present context. His "Principles of Geology" accompanied Darwin on his voyage in the Beagle and had a major influence on his thought. As a Deist, he was unhappy about introducing miracles to explain the origin of species; unlike Whewell, who thought it was compatible with science. Ruse sums this up neatly by saying that Lyell wanted a world left alone by God, in which organisms struggle for survival under the threat of extinction, whereas Whewell wanted to see God hovering protectively over his creation.
Fourthly, there were social and political influences. In the 1830s there was a real fear that revolution might spread to Britain from abroad; by 1860 this was no longer the case. And in the second half of the century it was possible for a man to become a professional scientist without private means and without taking Holy Orders: a change that helped to weaken the influence of religion.
It is difficult to describe all these developments without falling into circularity, because each type of cause influenced, and was influenced by, the others, but in a way this is precisely Ruse's point. He insists that there were many different threads intertwining among themselves and that it is misleading to oversimplify the argument by concentrating on what appear to be the "real" issues. I think he makes a convincing case for this claim. He finds no need to alter his views in this reissue of the book, as he explains in the Afterword, though I was glad to see that he softens his earlier criticism of Huxley, whom I have always rather liked. I was even more glad to read that he strongly dissociates himself from "social constructivism" in the history of science. He states emphatically that "Charles Darwin was telling us real truths about a real world". There is no question of organic evolution being a human-created fiction.
Ruse is, however, rather despondent about the present position of evolution studies as an academic discipline. He is concerned that evolution is often seen to be "popular science" and is usually linked with ecology, instead of being accorded the importance it deserves. There is indeed a paradox here, which Ruse perhaps fails to bring out fully. He mentions that in the USA today there are ten times as many departments of molecular biology as of evolution, but he does not point out that it is impossible to understand molecular biology adequately unless it is seen in an evolutionary context. The interesting question, therefore, is why this fact is not always recognized.
Much the same failure to take account of Darwinism exists within medicine. The origins of many diseases can only be understood from an evolutionary viewpoint (Charlton BG; Nesse RM, Williams GC). Immunology, which is basic to modern medicine, is an evolutionary science through and through (Tauber AI). And yet "Darwinian medicine" is hardly a dozen years old; even today, few doctors are familiar with the term. There is a sense in which the Darwinian revolution has still hardly begun.
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Of course it didn't come first (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Of course it didn't come first (Score:2)
People who argue against evolution usually don't have a clue what the mechanisms of evolution actually are.
Re:Of course it didn't come first (Score:2)
Re:Of course it didn't come first (Score:2)
*sigh*
You admit that microevolution takes place over short periods of time, so what's to stop macroevolution from occuring over long periods of time? We plainly observe the fact that species change over time. If you think there is some limit on the amount they can change, please explain why.
As an aside, do you believe that genetic paternity tresting is valid? If so, how do you feel about the same test showing that you are related to the monkey in the zoo down the street?
Re:Of course it didn't come first (Score:2)
hey, why dont you just join the flat earth society, their positions are as rasonable and as well founded as yours.
Re:Of course it didn't come first (Score:2)
Boop boop! Red flag!
"Species" is not a hard and fast category: there is no line, nothing stopping small changes from adding up to big ones. Lizards never "turn into" birds: there is instead a long long chain of intermediate creatures.
Holy poo! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Holy poo! (Score:2)
I guess he now lives/teaches down in the states somewhere, but still own a house in Canada where he lives, and during the school year he rents it outto students such as myself!
Great prof he may be, but not a very great landlord!
Creationism (Score:3, Insightful)
I have a question. Do creationists realise that their beliefs are really only a USA phenomenon? I've not seem much evidence of creationism anywhere else in the "first world". Just thought I'd ask because perhaps some American creationists think this is a hot issue all over the world. It's not.
Re:Creationism (Score:4, Insightful)
That's a tough one, since US creationists are only vaguely aware of the existence of a world outside the USA, and what awareness they do have tends to be about which parts of it need to be carpet-bombed to eliminate the infidels (oops, I mean pagans, getting my religious extremism confused there...)
We (The USA) are sorry. (Score:2)
In the future when Europe is on the verge of falling to a European dictator, we will leave Europe alone.
When Europe need to be rebuilt after that war, we will leave Europe alone.
When Europe need protection from forces from the East, we will leave Europe alone.
When Europe needs help in it's own backyard to bring down yet another dictator who is killing people just because of the ethnic background, we will leave Europe alone.
Re:We (The USA) are sorry. (Score:2)
Re:We (The USA) are sorry. (Score:2)
Also, it is a lot easier for a European to go to another country because the countries are so close to each other. The 375+ miles I drive to see my daughters would get from one country to another in a lot of Europe. In the US it gets me from Texas to just near the OK/AK border.It is rather expensive for a large portion of the people in the US to go to another country.
Re:We (The USA) are sorry. (Score:2)
Sorry, I guess I was thinking of the kind of creationist that believes the Earth is 4000 years old, etc. That's usually coupled with a large set of irrational beliefs denying evidence that's been collected by a large body of scientists around the world, including many Christians and members of other religions.
You're right about the difficulty most US residents have in travelling to other countries (other than Mexico or Canada). Although for many Americans, I suspect it's much more of a psychological block than a financial one - you can fly New York to London for $265 round trip, on Virgin Atlantic.
Of course, it'll be quite a bit more than that from Texas - which I'm sure does go a long way towards explaining the much higher level of fundamentalism in the central US states, which are physically isolated in a way that only has an equivalent in some other physically large countries like perhaps China, India, Brazil, Russia.
That might be fine if the US really was isolationist, but unfortunately (for you too), the US has a strong military presence in the Middle East, primarily to protect its oil interests. The combination of isolationism and global interventionism makes for some strange policies, and has some unfortunate consequences.
Re:We (The USA) are sorry. (Score:2)
Re:We (The USA) are sorry. (Score:2)
Wow!
And I guess that the united states were created by god from clay? No european country ever had to, you know, send a few people over, a couple of beasts of burden here and there, a few tools...none of that?
No military aid in your old wars or anything...no european country ever gave the US a giant statue to put in its harbor...the thing was there when you arrived, right?
When the US helped its european fiends, it was 1) looking out for its own interests and 2) REPAYING A DEPT, yup, they don,t owe you, you owed them.
And I guess from your "tone" that you feel that if european counties ever dare to make the US look bad by being more advanced that you are, you will feel the need for revenge and hope (or get the CIA to help) that a blody war kills 'em? Jeez...good christians indeed!
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
This is something I'd like to hear more about.
Re:Creationism (Score:4, Insightful)
It's cultural. Biblical literalism is not a widely held belief in any Western country other than the US. And creationism is a desperate kludge intended to explain the natural world without having to give up biblical literalism -- without the pre-existing belief, it's no more likely that anyone will take creationism seriously than that they'll take phlogiston or epicycles seriously.
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
I'd agree with this. There are lots of people who believe in God in Europe, but most don't find any conflict between their religious beliefs and science.
Textual Literalism (Score:2)
Similarly the US takes a kind of literalist view of its Constitution where many legal decisions are in fact textual analyses trying to extract the "original intention". It is interesting that the Magna Carta, for example, plays a far more important role in American history than it does in British history!
Islamic creationism? (Score:2)
Re:Creationism (Score:4, Informative)
Just to clarify (Score:2)
That's 5 percent who believe in a literal Biblical account of creation (Garden of Eden). The percentage of scientists who believe in a personal God (one who could answer prayers) is around 40% at last check, the percentage who believe in some kind of creator is higher than that.
Albert Einstein, for instance, was one of them.
Re:Just to clarify (Score:5, Informative)
Albert Einstein, for instance, was one of them.
Sheesh, not this old myth again. Here's one of the many pages [2think.org] that kill it. To quote Einstein,
When Einstein used the word "God", he used it as a methaphor for existence.
Re:Just to clarify (Score:2)
Mis-using them when one means "godlike" or "existance" is simply inexcusable from an intelligent person engaging in any sort of public dialogue.
Well, I don't know if I'd call it "inexcusable". That's a bit strong. I suppose it might have been clearer if he had said "Mother nature does not play dice" rather than "God does not play dice".
Thinking about it some more, I think he IS using the word in a reasonable way. You, as a Christian might not think so, but Christians don't have a monopoly on defining the nature of God. If Einstein wants to define "God" as "that which describes the nature of the universe" and is not a literal, sentient being, I think that's his and anyone's right. I think that's as good a definition of God as any.
Re:Just to clarify (Score:2)
Re:Just to clarify (Score:2)
Not really. "God does not play dice..." implies that God is seperate from what he's playing dice with.
I was going to post a follow-up post, but decide against it.
And at any rate... "God" means a distinct, sentient, powerful mind. Could be a group mind of souls. Could be Zeus. Could be Jesus, his poppa, and his momma. It doesn't mean "whatever someone chooses to worship."
A humanistic atheist doesn't use "God" to describe humanity--he just doesn't believe in God. The word has a general meaning, and that meaning (as opposed to the various permutations and interpretations that form religions) should be used without exception.
Re:Just to clarify (Score:2)
"Bhrama" is pretty specific. If you're Christian then I think (not 100% sure) Yahwe or Jehova might be the "specific" name for your God. I'm not sure about "Allah".
"God" is a very general term, used by all sorts of people to mean very different things. You may not like it, but language is a living thing and you and your religious group have very little influence over this.
If you want a word that applies only to your specific concept of God, then you need to make up your own. And even that doesn't guarantee that your new word won't be co-opted at some later point by people who feel it means something else.
Re:Just to clarify (Score:2)
Re:They're not that specific (Score:2)
Re:Just to clarify (Score:2, Informative)
Not so. This is taken from "Albert Einstein - The Human Side",a selection of his letters, edited by Helen Dukas and Banesh Hoffman, Princeton University Press, 1979.
"It was, of course, a lie what you read about my religious convictions, a lie which is being systematically repeated. I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it."
I think we can take his own words to be the truth of the matter.
Re: Einstein on Religion (Score:2)
Einstein on Cosmic Religious Feeling [earthlink.net]
"In my view, it is the most important function
of art and science to awaken this [cosmic religious] feeling
and keep it alive in those who are receptive to it.
(Albert Einstein)
Re: Einstein on Religion (Score:2)
2. More to the point, my link and data is about belief in Biblical accounts of cration, not on religious affiliation or sensibilities. Many scientists have some religious affiliation (I know a number of Buddhist-affiliated cognitive scientists) - that's a far, far cry from questioning scientific theories on the basis of religious doctrine.
from the chickens-coming-home-to-roost dept.... (Score:3, Insightful)
1) An educational system that, since the 1970's at LEAST has developed a pervasive philosophy of social promotion, moral relativism, and anti-intellectualism*. Teachers compensated not against performance, but according to time served.
2) Schools that have so much corruption, kickbacks, and a positively Medieval fixed resistance to change that they look like Papa Doc's Haiti.
3) Dependence on rote learning, memorization, and 'teaching to the test'.
4) A culture that agrees that your average pro baseball player should make $45/minute ($2.3 mill/yr), and popular icons are Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake, but there's little money for consistent space exploration.
* if you disagree, you've never seriously tried to dispute a politically-correct position in a modern American university system. No matter the labels, it's NOT about 'discourse', it's dogma. It may be liberal dogma, but it's dogma nonetheless.
I'll be blunt: people who believe in creationism are ignorant. The American educational system is turning out ignorant graduates. Why is anyone surprised that as these people grow into adulthood they are easily led by charismatics touting infantile ideas?
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
"Cosmogony itself speaks to us of the origins of the universe and its makeup, not in order to provide us with a scientific treatise but in order to state the correct relationship of man with God and with the universe. Sacred Scripture wishes simply to declare that the world was created by God, and in order to teach this truth, it expresses itself in the terms of the cosmology in use at the time of the writer. The sacred book likewise wishes to tell men that the world was not created as the seat of the gods, as was taught by other cosmogonies and cosmologies, but was rather created for the service of man and the glory of God. Any other teaching about the origin and makeup of the universe is alien to the intentions of the Bible, which does not wish to teach how heaven was made but how one goes to heaven."
Address to the Pontifical Academy of Sciences on 3 October 1981.
Re:Australia, too? (Score:2)
(Maybe it's as simple as the British shipping out their more obnoxious fundie sorts to the colonies.)
South America (Score:2)
In Brazil the Catholic schools have been teaching Evolution as a scientific fact for a long time. One detail easily overlooked is that the Catholic Church never favoured the literal interpretation of the Bible - sometimes they even considered certain literal interpretation sins.
I never seem any creationinst around here. They must exist somewhere, but they are probably hidden in their churches talking among themselves.
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
Is that true? If it is then it is a fairly recent phenomenon. I remember that a couple of years ago the Pope kind of hinted that Catholics need to have an open mind about evolution, but some people I know who went to Catholic schools were taught that evolution was wrong.
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
For certain definitions of recent.
In his encyclical Humani Generis (1950), Pius XII had stated that there was no opposition between evolution and the doctrine of the faith about man and his vocation. John Paul II has also reconfirmed this position. As I read it, they allow evolution to describe what happened to the body and make the soul the center of a spiritual creation.
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
There will always be a spectrum of compliance with social norms. You, calling upon logic and willpower to change human nature as a whole, will never make it happen. Communism (yes, even when "purely implemented") fails because you will NEVER get a large enough fraction of people to behave that way. The institutionalized atheism of many totalitarian states is in a constant state of struggle against human nature. In structuring civilization, you have to rely on the immutable parts of human nature, as well as the parts that we can make better through individual effort and social pressures.
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
And you point me to an American web site that doesn't give any evidence of what you are talking about?
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
lol!
He said first world countries! : )
India still has the black plague, super powered monkey men, a magic river that purifies everything it touches...Just because a minority in the country is educated enough to have nuclear weapons doesn't mean the country isn't still in the middle ages.
China's just as bad, and africa is a continent, not a country. (that what you get when you teach people to call the inhabitants of a country by the name of the inhabitants of the whole continent, they get geographically confused).
You are aware of the incidence of genitalia theft in african countries? They get muderous riots because people magically steal (and then put back) people's genitalia in crowds...do these people sound even remotly advanced enough to even begin to understand the principles of natural selection?
Yes, I know that there are educated, sensible and intellgent people in china, india and in the many countries of africa, but they are still living in countries where most of the population is still stuck in the dark ages...except that they have guns.
The thing is, the U.S. isn't supposed to be such a place. Its the most industrialised country in the world, its got the biggest war machine ever, and it still manages to be full of historically retarded individuals. (although the people of the USA aren't stuck in the dark ages, more like the late 1700's...the haydays of savage capitalism, right before the age of reason).
See, historians like to say "the middle ages stopped on that date" and so on, but people don't allways obey historians, and will quite often hold on to their mindset even after its gone out of style.
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
However, it goes together so well, that might conclude that a great author had to write a story of such greatness. In the end, the believability of the Bible flows from human authority, but this human authority is also subject to Bible.
The Bible as a "Believable" Document (Score:2)
The "believability" of the bible stems from several misconceptions, and several phenomina that people of a literal interpretive religious bent (e.g. "creationists" among others) either fail to understand or deliberately ignore.
1) prophecy is routinely manipulated for political and social ends, by charlitans, "legitimate" leaders, clergy and politicians. The bible is no exception. In other words, prophecy is vague and easilly self-fulfilled by those wishing to do so, for whatever reason.
2) The bible was heavilly edited in the 3rd century AD to support the mythos, doctrine, and dogma of the day. This included changes in both the new and old testaments (try comparing it to the Torah sometime) as well as the wholesale removal of numerous gospels altogether.
3) Even so, the bible is so full of contradictions that it can be used to "say" anything. These contradictions are generally swept under the rug, either excused by the faithful as "translation errors," "figurative allegory," or simply ignored outright.
That the bible is considered "believable" says more about the vulnerability of children to indoctrination, the overall gullability of the under-educated, and the power of wishful thinking among those who really should know better, than it does the veracity of the document itself, which is sufficiently full of logical holes as to require a different interpretation of the adjective "holy" than is commonly ascribed.
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
You could, but if you're Jewish, that reading seems like sort of a forced kludge on many accounts, and itself evidence that whoever wrote the Gospels had a very poor grasp of the Scripture they are supposedly referencing. Indeed, it's not so surprising at all that there would be connections to Scripture, since the Gospel writers go out of their way to write in the supposed fulfillment of various phrophecies, even to ridiculous lengths of having Jesus ride on two asses at once, mistranslating a passage in Scripture that it just poetically describing one ass. "His name is called Emmanuel..." but only by the Gospel writers, in their own narration! But most importantly to the Jews, Jesus doesn't bring with him the Messianic age, which was the whole POINT of the Messiah. It was never suposed to be about WHO this particular Messiah was (the Christian reading, of course, also mangles the very concept of Messiah, making it singular and all about the person of the Messiah).
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
But the Catholic church now accepts evolution. As do most Catholics in europe.
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
Note - I am not a Catholic nor any other variety of Christian, although I was trained by Jesuits and Dominicans, studied theology and used to attend theological conferences.
Re:Good argument (Score:2)
It amazes me that there seem to be so many Americans that believe that things like right to life, liberty and "the pursuit of happyness" are American ideas. Try reading some history books.
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
FYI: Hebrew used for "day" (Score:2)
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
Might have something to do with the phrase "...and the evenening and the morning were the first day." Given Strong's definitions (below), what other reasonable way is there to interpret it but a calendar day? From Strong's for evening... And from Strong's for morning...
Re:Creationism (Score:2)
Another Troll Article: -1 Flamebait (Score:2, Insightful)
For how long is plinking back and forth with people who have no remote intention of taking even a second to contemplate the argument of the opposition's viewpoint?
Well, here's the OBLink to Talk origins [talkorigins.org].
Let's find a more interesting flamewar, OK?
Great book... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Great book... (Score:2)
2) There aren't a lot of differences in how different cultures have studied evolution. Science tends to transcend cultural differences. The one exception seems to be Creationism, which is largely an American pathology.
3) Studies in evolution are funded by many organizations, both government and private, including NIH, NSF, and private biomedical companies. Evolution is so fundamental that virtually any study in biology or medicine bears on evolution to some extent. For example, perhaps the most extensive source of information on human evolution--the human genome--was sequenced independently by NIH funded investigators and private firms.
Re:Great book... (Score:2)
One explaination I heard was that it sort of fell naturally out of the exploration of geology. When people discovered how geological strata was depositied, and investigated further, they discovered that the fossils were different in different strata.
The inevitable Creation vs. Evolution debate (Score:4, Interesting)
As in, if God were to miraculously bring a thunderstorm on you for some reason, a scientific examination of the event would reveal only that air currents and moisure combined in a certain way to create the storm. God's touch would be invisible to the materialist observer.
Whether or not there was a greater meaning behind the events is and always will be left undiscovered by the scientists. This is not a fault of the scientists; that simply is not their job.
If God set evolution in motion to bring about man, so be it. I find the subject of evolution fascinating, but I believe in God for reasons completely unrelated to it (that is, regardless of the exact method of creation).
Re:The inevitable Creation vs. Evolution debate (Score:2)
Must be a strange subject if you miss the point by a mile. Creationism is not just about god putting things in motion, but rather how Evolution never took place as god created Adam and Eve and so forth.
What people are here referring to is mostly US crap like Kansas forcing schools to teach evolution as an theory alternative alongside with creationism. Which I find bloody frightening.
BTW, good points here about creationism being mostly US movement. From nowhere else I've ever heard of similar stuff, not in first, second nor third world for that matters...
Re:The inevitable Creation vs. Evolution debate (Score:2)
Re:The inevitable Creation vs. Evolution debate (Score:2)
What right do you have to ask anyone to explain that, when you can't even answer it with regards to YOUR hypothesis either? One could simply say that the Blingbattians are causeless beings: they simply ARE.
---There are many reasons I believe in God and that the Bible is His all authorative written word without one single *proven* error, many that can be found at: apologeticspress.org [apologeticspress.org].---
That's mroe of an opinion than a fact. Apologism of this sort is just another "prove a negative" exercise, in which all an apologist has to do is suggest some possible way for something not to be a contradiction or error. With that incredibly low standard of proof, barrier to disproof, almost any text, even fictional novels, could be defended the same way, especially when one can always fall back on the "it's a mystery" line.
--- So, eventually you reach a point of saying that either matter and energy can be created and/or destroyed (a big scientific no-no),---
That's a quite common misread of the laws of thermodynamics. The actual observation behind the law is that energy of a closed system stays constant. For most purposes, that does mean that matter/energy can't be created or destroyed. But the fact is, it is quite possible that "something" can emerge out of nothing: and according to QM, it happens all the time, all around you, without any cause. The trick is that a particle appears suddenly at the same time as an anti-particle: and the two particles have a total energy level of 0: i.e. this event doesn't increase or decrease the total energy level at all. Normally, these particles self-anihilate almost immediately as they appear. But, interesting fact: the total energy of the universe appears to be (once we count negative energy such as gravity), if you can believe it... 0.
Re:The inevitable Creation vs. Evolution debate (Score:2)
Cite? This sounds like some good old slander to me.
---They have a faith-based presupposition (since it is not necessarily provable) that evolutionary theory is correct and try to find data to support what they believe. This is the exact thing evolutionists often criticize creationists for, and it is absolute hypocrisy.---
Again: this is just an accusation leveled at biologists. But is it a fair accusation? I don't think so. The majority of biologists believe in god, for goodness sakes.
---This may have been what it was intended to be when first presented, but so many have used it as a basis for their worldview it has developed into a lot more.---
Or so your masters tell you to repeat, ad naseum, without any arguement or evidence, simply because it paints biology in a nasty light.
"The third class of change affected religion" (Score:2, Interesting)
I'm about 400 pages into Gould's Structure of Evolutionary Theory, and I'm reminded again and again that "critics" of Evolution/Natural-Selection/Darwinism/viz. are pretty much unaware of the Religion-Science dichotomy: the two do not really intersect, although one may certainly (and easily) affect if not distort the perception of the other.
There's no greater sign of this than Gould's quoting of Paley's Natural Theology, and consistently, most Christians really wouldn't bother to learn what Paley was referring to. Darwin was influenced by Paley's terminology (and Gould even gives Paley some merit on his views); but the two are still in different stratae. I would suspect that most Christians, not knowing Darwin's or Paley's views, would not be able to differentiate the two.
It's as though if it sounds or reads "too much" like Science, it must be Science, and must be countering God's design.
Makes me wanna hollar
Re:"The third class of change affected religion" (Score:2)
Related book: _Darwin's Century_ (Score:2)
His essay collections (The Immense Journey, The Night Country) are primo stuff; entertaining and sobering reflections on science and nature.
One of Eiseley's most important books, however, was Darwin's Century: Evolution and the Men Who Discovered It:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0385081413
My review is the lastest (top) one.
Stefan
Fallacy of the excluded middle (Score:4, Interesting)
I got a call this morning from someone asking me to listen to "Focus on the Family" this morning because they were playing a tape of a debate held at Stanford between a creationist and evolutionist. I was immediately turned off because the creationist would make sweeping statements without support, like "evolution is based on bad and shaky evidence." Also, the evolutionist was assumed by the audience to be driven by an anti-God agenda, and gave no evidence to the contrary.
If the reason for holding these "debates" is to foster intellectual honesty in "both camps," then at least they should admit that there are a great number of reasonable people who hold neither of these publicized views. By limiting the debate to these two views they present the undecided with a false dichotomy, and by golly, with as effective as science is elsewhere, that must mean that there is no God!
The real reason for holding these debates (Score:2)
We hold no hope for the hard entrenched "card-carrying" anti-science ones, but there is a huge young audience whose upbringing may have favoured a distorted, supersticious, view of science. These can be saved from their ignorance and their children may have hope for a better education, away from the pathetic 6000 years old Earth crowd.
Re:Fallacy of the excluded middle (Score:3, Interesting)
Which just goes to show you don't understand the position of science. Science only considers the natural world and can say nothing about the existence or non-existence of any supernatural being
Science does tell us that evolution is a fact, because it is an observed phenomena. Science can't tell us if evolution is driven by a supernatural being or not. However science has developed a very strong theory about evolution that explains it in terms entirely consistent with the natural world.
So the strongest statement science can make is that you need not invoke God to explain evolution as observed in the fossil record or in living ecosystems.
But the fact that such an explanation exists does not deny the existence of God.
This is why so many scientists have no problem reconciling their belief in God with science. Faith and science operate in different realms, as someone mentioned in a previous post. Of course many scientists don't believe in God, and many who do believe in God aren't Christian, not surprising given the fact that science is a world-wide profession.
Re:Fallacy of the excluded middle (Score:2)
Marvellous points indeed, and I fully agree. Most religious people that I know of are far from creationism. Actually I cannot believe that anyone in their right minds would actually believe and promote creationism. You go figure out what meen there with "in their right minds".
BUT I must say that among western scientists outside US the whole god discussion has been dropped aswell. Due to it being unnecessary assumption. It serves no purpose whatsoever, taken, that you don't need the (should I even say childish) comfort a belief to some higher power can bring you.
Just before you go ranting back at me, I must clarify that I'm not denying gods existence, I'm merely stating that as an uncausal entity it's not worth the hypothesis.
Re:Fallacy of the excluded middle (Score:2)
Molecular Biology (Score:2)
Perhaps it is because some molecular biologists (Behe) see a intellegent design in molecular biology and do not see it a strictly evolutionary context.
Good grief are we going through this again??? (Score:4, Insightful)
Religious person: Evolution is wrong.
Everyone else: We can prove that creationism is stupid just search on Google [google.com]!
Religious Person: but evolution is wrong to because bla bla
Everyone else: Well you're a stupid fool for believing that crap bla bla bla
There, its all there, nothing else has to be said you can go on to a different article now.
This wouldn't be such a big issue if people realized that the Bible was written by people who didn't understand science for people who didn't understand science, therefore its a metaphor, what's important to the creation story is WHO(God) and WHY (he wanted companions). Rather than HOW which for the most part is left to our imagination, if we scientifically prove evolution then great, that doesn't change WHO and WHY (but you can choose to believe that or not).
I agree this issue would also go away if more Christians themselves would realize that faithwise this is a non-issue, that they can believe whatever they want about where we came from but that Loving Thy Neighbor is far far far more important that flamewars over evolution!
That said how is evolution something that matters on a technology site anyway? I get the feeling that these articles are here just to start pointless flamewars over religion. Hey! There's enough fighting over religion in the world without adding it to
Re:Good grief are we going through this again??? (Score:2)
So if God is concise, and only says what He wants us to know, then why do we have the account of creation, if it's a non-issue of how the universe got here?
Exactly my point!!! He tells us what he wants us to know. The Creation story really doesn't say much how other than 'God did it', 'God spoke and there was light'. It doesn't go into fine detail and science of the whole thing, it's there to point out that God being all powerful created the world and us. I don't dispute that, but for all we know God spoke "Let there be light" and then the big bang happened creating stars and galaxies and such and thus creating: light.
By that interpretation the whole theory of evolution would fit inside the creation story. And if you get hung up on the 7 days thing, Jesus himself later says "A day is but a 1000 years to God" (sorry I couldn't find the ref) saying that God is not bound by time, which leads me to believe that the 7 days is a metaphor to put the vast amount of time for creation into terms (especially ancient) humans could understand.
God created it, that's the point. How he created it is the stuff of flamewar.
Christianity stands on Jesus, arguing details of Creation makes us sound foolish and stupid. We as Christians need to do what Jesus would do (i know that's horribly cliche'). I'm pretty sure that Jesus would not participate in a creation argument nor does he approve of them.
Wrong evolution (Score:2)
Savor the Irony (Score:2)
heh (Score:2)
How odd that this book even exists (Score:2)
There's something interesting in the way evolution continually focuses on itself. In defending itself against creationism, evolution touts itself as objective science, rational answers, the generally accepted truth of the scientific community. And yet, I don't see books with titles like "Continental Drift: The Evolution of an Idea" or "The Big Bang: Collecting the Evidence" getting written, let alone reviewed.
There's something about evolution, and the debate around it, that invites what I've come to think of as scientific elitism. If it were a SCIENTIFIC THEORY that COULDN'T BE ARGUED based on the AVAILABLE EVIDENCE, then that would be that. The Big Bang and continental drift don't get all this attention, but evolution does. Is it because those theories are more rigid, that there's less debate over the nuances of how they happened, than genetic evolution? Or is it because scientific minds genuinely like to push fundamentalists' hot buttons?
Maybe this is just an American phenomenon; maybe other countries are more at ease with the scientific theory of evolution and the whens and hows of it all. I just find it odd that for a theory that claims to have so much science backing it up, it needs to keep reminding everyone of its validity. One begins to wonder if the scientists doth protest too much.
Re:How odd that this book even exists (Score:2)
I suspect it's because the history of evolution has an interesting plot. There's a compelling story to be told.
This isn't unique. The development of the transistor was an event of imense importance, but you see far more being written about the Enigma machine. Was the Enigma machine more important? No, just sexier.
Re:How odd that this book even exists (Score:2)
Not at all. The battleground isn't science, it is the science classroom in tax-funded schools in the United States.
"Creation Science" was invented to get the story of Creation as told in the Bible into our public schools. It can't be taught as religon due to Supreme Court rulings that hold that the doctrine of separation of Church and State in the Constitution prevent it in tax-funded schools (you can do what you want in private schools).
Thus "Creation Science". The argument is that, as a "real" science, the doctrine of separation of Church and State does not apply. On the heels of this follows the argument that evolutionary science is "junk science" and should be replaced by so-called "Creation Science", or that the latter should at least be given equal footing. Not simply in schools, but in the science classroom, i.e. the Biblical Creation story should be taught as science .
See ... because it's not really religion but science.
If a similar movement were to arise in opposition to theories in modern physics you'd see the same sort of reaction among scientists as you do today with evolution vs. so-called Creation Science.
contrast (Score:2)
It is not as though the alternative is a poison. If the young minds of Cobb Cty can't be moved from their faulty instruction and misapprehensions by subsequent study, their convictions can be classed as theological and impervious to reason. And politely ignored by reasonable society.
The TYPUS in Organic Nature (Score:2)
i've always felt it is better to go back to the ORIGINAL documents
than to read commentary ABOUT them. in addition to Darwin, there was
also Haeckel, Kant, and Steiner -- who were certainly some of darwin's
most significant fellow researchers in the area. here's a experpted chapter from
one of Darwins contemporaries circa 1886:
The TYPUS in Organic Nature [elib.com]
Above all, one has committed a serious error in this. One believed that the method of inorganic science should simply be taken over into the realm of organisms. One considered the method employed here to be altogether the only scientific one, and thought that for "organics" to be scientifically possible, it would have to be so in exactly the same sense in which physics is, for example. The possibility was forgotten, however, that perhaps the concept of what is scientific is much broader than "the explanation of the world according to the laws of the physical world." Even today one has not yet penetrated through to this knowledge. Instead of investigating what it is that makes the approach of the inorganic sciences scientific, and of then seeing a method that can be applied to the world of living things while adhering to the requirements that result from this investigation, one simply declared that the laws gained upon this lower stage of existence are universal.
Above all, however, one should investigate what the basis is for any scientific thinking. We have done this in our study. In the preceding chapter we have also recognized that inorganic lawfulness is not the only one in existence but is only a special case of all possible lawfulness in general. The method of physics is simply one particular case of a general scientific way of investigation in which the nature of the pertinent objects and the region this science serves are taken into consideration. If this method is extended into the organic, one obliterates the specific nature of the organic. Instead of investigating the organic in accordance with its nature, one forces upon it a lawfulness alien to it. In this way, however, by denying the organic, one will never come to know it. Such scientific conduct simply repeats, upon a higher level, what it has gained upon a lower one; and although it believes that it is bringing the higher form of existence under laws established elsewhere, this form slips away from it in its efforts, -because such scientific conduct does not know how to grasp and deal with this form in its particular nature.
All this comes from the erroneous view that the method of a science is extraneous to its objects of study, that it is not determined by these objects but rather by our own nature. It is believed that one must think in a particular way about objects, that one must indeed think about all objects -- throughout the entire universe -- in the same way. Investigations are undertaken that are supposed to show that, due to the nature of our spirit, we can think only inductively or deductively, etc.
In doing so, however, one overlooks the fact that the objects perhaps will not tolerate the way of looking at them that we want to apply to them.
A look at the views of Haeckel, who is certainly the most significant of the natural-scientific theoreticians of the present day, shows us that the objection we are making to the organic natural science of our day is entirely justified: namely, that it does not carry over into organic nature the principle of scientific contemplation in the absolute sense, but only the principle of inorganic nature.
When he demands of all scientific striving that "the causal interconnections of phenomena become recognized everywhere," when he says that "if psychic mechanics were not so infinitely complex, if we were also able to have a complete overview of the historical development of psychic functions, we would then be able to bring them all into a mathematical soul formula," then one can see clearly from this what he wants: to treat the whole world according to the stereotype of the method of the physical sciences.
This demand, however, does not underlie Darwinism in its original form but only in its present-day interpretation. We have seen that to explain a process in inorganic nature means to show its lawful emergence out of other sense-perceptible realities, to trace it back to objects that, like itself, belong to the sense world. But how does modern organic science employ the principles of adaptation and the struggle for existence (both of which we certainly do not doubt are the expression of facts)? It is believed that one can trace the character of a particular species directly back to the outer conditions in which it lived, in somewhat the same way as the heating of an object is traced back to the rays of the sun falling upon it. One forgets completely that one can never show a species' character, with all its qualities that are full of content, to be the result of these conditions. The conditions may have a determining influence, but they are not a creating cause. We can definitely say that under the influence of certain circumstances a species had to evolve in such a way that one or another organ became particularly developed; what is there as content, however, the specifically organic, cannot be derived from outer conditions. Let us say that an organic entity has the essential characteristics a b c; then, under the influence of certain outer conditions, it has evolved. Through this, its characteristics have taken on the particular form a'b'c'. When we take these influences into account we will then understand that a has evolved into the form of a', b into b', c into c'. But the specific nature of a, b, and c can never arise as the outcome of external conditions.
One must, above all, focus one's thinking on the question: From what do we then derive the content of that general "something" of which we consider the individual organic entity to be a specialized case? We know very well that the specialization comes from external influences. But we must trace the specialized shape itself back to an inner principle. We gain enlightenment as to why just this particular form has evolved when we study a being's environment. But this particular form is, after all, something in and of itself; we see that it possesses certain characteristics. We see what is essential. A content, configurated in itself, confronts the outer phenomenal world, and this content provides us with what we need in tracing those characteristics back to their source. In inorganic nature we perceive a fact and see, in order to explain it, a second, a third fact and so on; and the result is that the first fact appears to us to be the necessary consequence of the other ones. In the organic world this is not so. There, in addition to the facts, we need yet another factor. We must see what works in from outer circumstances as confronted by something that does not passively allow itself to be determined by them but rather determines itself, actively, out of itself, under the influence of the outer circumstances.
But what is that basic factor? It can, after all, be nothing other than what manifests in the particular in the form of the general. In the particular, however, a definite organism always manifests. That basic factor is therefore an organism in the form of the general: a general image of the organism, which comprises within itself all the particular forms of organisms.
Following Goethe's example, let us call this general organism typus. Whatever the word typus might mean etymologically, we are using it in this Goethean sense and never mean anything else by it than what we have indicated. This typus is not developed in all its completeness in any single organism. Only our thinking, in accordance with reason, is able to take possession of it, by drawing it forth, as a general image, from phenomena. The typus is therewith the idea of the organism: the animalness in the animal, the general plant in the specific one.
One should not picture this typus as anything rigid. It has nothing at all to do with what Agassiz, Darwin's most significant opponent, called "an incarnate creative thought of God's." The typus is something altogether fluid, from which all the particular species and genera, which one can regard as subtypes or specialized types, can be derived. The typus does not preclude the theory of evolution. It does not contradict the fact that organic forms evolve out of one another. It is only reason's protest against the view that organic development consists purely in sequential, factual (sense-perceptible) forms. It is what underlies this whole development. It is what establishes the interconnection in all this endless manifoldness. It is the inner aspect of what we experience as the outer forms of living things. The Darwinian theory presupposes the typus.
The typus is the true archetypal organism; according to how it specializes ideally, it is either archetypal plant or archetypal animal. It cannot be any one, sense-perceptibly real living being. What Haeckel or other naturalists regard as the archetypal form is already a particular shape; it is, in fact, the simplest shape of the typus. The fact that in time the typus arises in its simplest form first does not require the forms arising later to be the result of those preceding them in time. AR forms result as a consequence of the typus; the first as well as the last are manifestations of it. We must take it as the basis of a true organic science and not simply undertake to derive the individual animal and plant species out of one another. The typus runs like a red thread through all the developmental stages of the organic world. We must hold onto it and then with it travel through this great realm of many forms. Then this realm will become understandable to us. Otherwise it falls apart for us, just as the rest of the world of experience does, into an unconnected mass of particulars. In fact, even when we believe that we are leading what is later, more complicated, more compound, back to a previous simpler form and that in the latter we have something original, even then we are deceiving ourselves, for we have only derived a specific form from a specific form.
Friedrich Theodor Vischer once said of the Darwinian theory that it necessitates a revision of our concept of time. We have now arrived at a point that makes evident to us in what sense such a revision would have to occur. It would have to show that deriving something later out of something earlier is no explanation, that what is first in time is not first in principle. All deriving has to do with principles, and at best it could be shown which factors were at work such that one species of beings evolved before another one in time.
The typus plays the same role in the organic world as natural law does in the inorganic. Just as natural law provides us with the possibility of recognizing each individual occurrence as a part of one great whole, so the typus puts us in a position to regard the individual organism as a particular form of the archetypal form.
http://wn.elib.com/Steiner/Books/GA002/English/GA
--
best regards,
john [earthlink.net]
Re: (Score:2)
Darwin on The EYE (Score:2)
for adjusting the focus to different distances, for admitting
different amounts of light, and for the correction of spherical
and chromatic aberration could have been formed by natural
selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest degree.'
(CHARLES DARWIN, Origin of the Species)
A suggestion for the unbelievers (Score:2)
10. ARGUMENT FROM CREATION
(1) If evolution is false, then creationism is true, and therefore God
exists.
(2) Evolution can't be true, since I lack the mental capacity to
understand it; moreover, to accept its truth would cause me to be
uncomfortable
(3) Therefore, God exists.
26. ARGUMENT FROM AMERICAN EVANGELISM
(1) Telling people that God exists makes me filthy rich.
(2) Therefore, God exists.
120. ARGUMENT FROM PERSECUTION (II) / ARGUMENT FROM IDIOCY (I)
1) Jesus said that people would make fun of Christians.
2) I am an idiot.
3) People often point that out.
4) Therefore, God exists.
Evolution and Irrelevance (Score:2)
Philosophy consists of epistemology, metaphysics, logic, ethics, and philosophy of language. It is difficult to see any applicability of the theory of evolution in any of these fields. The philosophical argument advanced in the review about the incompatibility of metaphysical idealism with evolution is rather strange. Adherents of the forms of Idealism attacked therein are likely to say that the argument suffers from equivocation. "Species as eternal Forms," I can hear such Idealists saying, "are not sets of animals which can interbreed and have fertile offspring."
The continual Slashdot derision of Creationism is based on a straw man and/or bandwagon argument and the fallacy of the excluded middle. "Creationists all believe the Universe is less than ten thousand years old and was created in exactly the manner described in Genesis; since this view is disproven, God did not create the Universe!" is the line generally taken here, and there should be no need for an explanation of why this is fallacious. Nor is there any serious threat from the people who say "My Google-based Rules/Sucks-o-meter says God did not create the Universe" or "Contemporary Europeans don't believe God created the Universe."
No adherent of any metaphysical or theological/anti-theological position need feel that the above is an argument against that position. I have here argued only against misapplying what I think is a solid scientific theory.
troll allert (Score:2)
Go away, troll. Go read Dennett's book 'Darwin's dangerous idea'. Don't come back until you are done.
Oh, and I suppose that the fact that none questions or discourses on the fact that 1 + 1 = 2 makes it no longer true any more?
And BTW, if 'Nobody seriously believes that stuff anymore', what is the replacement scientific theory that explains the diversity of life better?
Re:knee-jerk "troll alert" alert (Score:2)
By an armchair philosopher who's probably never seen the inside of a biolab. You don't know much about the author, do you? Have you looked for other books in this field? Hint: slashdot has reviewed 2 this week.
Of course 1 + 1 = 2. Perhaps you could provide similarly simple and intuitive proof of evolution actually occurring in nature?
Naah, other have done that better, if you'd bother to educate yourself. See Dawkins and above references. It hasn't been disproved yet.
BTW, you don't have to believe in evolution: it believes in you. Disease bacteria aquire resistance to antibiotics, and closing your eyes won't make you well.
I've already mentioned what that prevailing theory is in biology: intelligent design. The complexity of life simply cannot be explained any other way.
Really. Would you mind giving me figures of how and by how much this theory prevails? For a start, what % of biological researchers believe it? And where they think the 'intelligent design comes from'?
Re:knee-jerk "troll alert" alert (Score:2)
Seriously, how many biology--and more importantly--anthropology classes have you taken? Because if you just allow yourself to be a self-directed reader, you will (inevitably) get a skewed view of reality. You need the rigorous, objective treatment of a good old-fashioned <jed clampet>U-nee-verse-it-ee</jed clampet> to get an understanding of the state of the science.
By the way, not to nitpick, but do you have any idea how complicated a proof of 1+1=2 is? Depending on the axiomatic system that the proof is given in, (IIRC) the proof ranges from several dozen to several hundred steps. The most commonly accepted axiomatic system (based on Peano's postulates) falls in the latter category. My point: nothing in Science or Mathematics is either simple or intuitive. If you try to understand either intuitively (unless you're a Ramanujan, which I doubt) you're doomed to fail.
Re:Questions evolutionists don't want to answer (Score:2)
2,3,4,5) Nothing to do with Evolution of life on Earth.
6) Perfection of scripture: hahahaha. No, *which* scripture??
Bhudist, Shinto, Hindu, Judaic or Moslem scripture?
Hoaxes: So how does that dispove anything except the hoax concerned?
6) Like this: You have a *very* long row to hoe here, and you could start with a proof not a charge, and start that be describing just what you think this 'modern Information Theory (IT)' is in your opinion. I've certainly never heared of it.
My face is not red, my feet aint shuffling, but you, old buddy, are a trolling, know-nothing zealot.
Re:Questions evolutionists don't want to answer (Score:2)
Re:Questions evolutionists don't want to answer (Score:2)
You have blind faith. You can answer any question with "God did it!" You don't have to give any other reason. The rest of us however need to think about our beliefs, and we can't just fall back on blind faith.
Or actually, may be that's the best response. May be you could understand that. So here's my response to your questions:
I don't have to answer your questions because I have blind faith that evolution is true. I don't need any proof and I don't need to explain things, just my blind faith that it is true.
Re:Questions evolutionists don't want to answer (Score:2)
Re:Questions evolutionists don't want to answer (Score:2)
I guess you could say it is possible. And I expect if something was unearthed that proved the existance of a God, then you'd find a lot of people start to believe, even scientists. But the fact of the matter is that no such proof exists, nor is there ever likely to be such proof.
Re:Questions evolutionists don't want to answer (Score:2)
I'd just like to point out the obvious, that the theory of Darwinian evolution, and the science of biology in general, have about as much to say about the Big Bang as they do about whether it will rain in Seattle on Labor Day. Biology asks the question, "OK, there's life on this planet, so how does it work?" How the planet got there in the first place is not a question relevant to biology.
When did you stop beating your wife?
hyacinthus.Re:Questions evolutionists don't want to answer (Score:2)
1) Satan forgot to place transitional fossils in ground while he placing other fossils in the ground to confound us and lead us away from Jehovah.
2) Hmm... How do you explain the presence of the three-week-old bottle of milk in my refrigerator in a solar system that is supposed to be "billions" of years old?
3) The Demiurge was eating Pop Rocks and drinking Coke at the same time, in spite of God's warnings.
4) Angels or Aliens with vacuum cleaners? The fact that the solar system is moving through a galaxy with varying debris densities? Dang! That's a tired out argument, already!!! (See this [talkorigins.org] for more info.
5) How do you reconcile the hoaxes and embarrassments of religion (i.e. Inquisitions, Jihads, Caste systems, Sabbatai Svi, Heaven's Gate, ad nausem) to the perfection (well... maybe not) of Mathematics?
6) Huh?
I shouldn't do this, but I will anyway (Score:2)
However, the phrase "all of the transitional fossils" is usually used (dishonestly) by creationsts to claim that no such fossils exist. Of course, every time paleontologists find a transitional species between two other known species, this leaves two transitions to be filled instead of one... The fact that we have evidence of thousands and thousands of intermediate species, and that DNA evidence of living species backs up the morphological family tree to a degree which would be impossible save for common descent, is ironclad evidence that life on Earth evolved and continues to evolve.
Comets which orbit in the Kuiper belt or further out remain "young" as long as they stay there. Until some gravitational perturbation changes their orbit to come close to a planet which slings their paths into the inner solar system, they never get "old". So yes, some comets we see could be billions of years old and still making their first passes near the Sun; this is why astronomers study them for evidence of the conditions prevailing in the early Solar System (and these astronomers are not creationists). We don't know yet. Science is never ashamed to admit lack of an answer where evidence is not available. Creationists have a disorder known in other contexts as Male Answer Syndrome and are unable to humble themselves to that point. Dust is one thing, regolith is another. Solid rock on the Moon's surface is a rarity; most of it is material which has been bombarded and shattered dozens or thousands of times (look up "microbreccias" for an idea of what this produces). However, the surface of the Moon is in hard vacuum, and loose dust vacuum-welds together to form a more cohesive surface. It still has lots of open space and insulates extremely well, though; the Apollo heat-flow experiments had to sit for longer than their design lifetime for the heat of drilling to dissipate so that they could actually measure heat flow! Funny you should mention that. Genesis has two distinct and contradictory creation stories, which religion has done a very poor job of even admitting, much less criticizing and correcting. As previously mentioned, the errors and hoaxes of science were found and corrected by scientists. "In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice, there is."There's a pretty good rebuttal of the IT claim in the Feb. 2001 post of the month [talkorigins.org]. Or perhaps you should just walk your way through some of these Google search results [google.com]; you might learn something if your mind is open to it.
Re:Questions evolutionists don't want to answer (Score:2)
Troll on over to Google and ask your questions (Score:2)
Where are all of the transitional fossils?
What, you mean all the fossils that actually prompted people to think about all this to start with? The ones people were discovering in the 19th century that caused people like Darwin to wonder, "Hey, the fossil record in South America includes these giant forms of what appear to be relatives of modern animals? What gives?" Those fossils? Go look at the history of evolutionary thought -- this book we're talking about might be a good starting point -- and watch how, as people try to explain the fossils they're finding, they eventually arrive at more and more coherent ideas about how evolution works. It's not like they started up bashing your "perfect" scripture out of a wrongheaded desire to make trouble, and then couldn't find any evidence; they started with the evidence you're saying is absent, and it pushed them, against their wills in a lot of different ways, toward the conclusion that scripture-based world views just didn't explain things. Darwin was trained as a priest in the Anglican church, and he really struggled with his ideas, but trying to explain the physical evidence pushed him along.
You've got it exactly backward, both historically and in terms of how you'd like to argue.
Re:I'll take Rael over Evolution (Score:2)
Now, that's a cool site. I'm converted!
Re:The TRUTH is out there (Score:2)
YOU are out there.